Viruses (Apr 2015)

Genetic Characterization of the Tick-Borne Orbiviruses

  • Manjunatha N. Belaganahalli,
  • Sushila Maan,
  • Narender S. Maan,
  • Joe Brownlie,
  • Robert Tesh,
  • Houssam Attoui,
  • Peter P. C. Mertens

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/v7052185
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 5
pp. 2185 – 2209

Abstract

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The International Committee for Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV) recognizes four species of tick-borne orbiviruses (TBOs): Chenuda virus, Chobar Gorge virus, Wad Medani virus and Great Island virus (genus Orbivirus, family Reoviridae). Nucleotide (nt) and amino acid (aa) sequence comparisons provide a basis for orbivirus detection and classification, however full genome sequence data were only available for the Great Island virus species. We report representative genome-sequences for the three other TBO species (virus isolates: Chenuda virus (CNUV); Chobar Gorge virus (CGV) and Wad Medani virus (WMV)). Phylogenetic comparisons show that TBOs cluster separately from insect-borne orbiviruses (IBOs). CNUV, CGV, WMV and GIV share low level aa/nt identities with other orbiviruses, in ‘conserved’ Pol, T2 and T13 proteins/genes, identifying them as four distinct virus-species. The TBO genome segment encoding cell attachment, outer capsid protein 1 (OC1), is approximately half the size of the equivalent segment from insect-borne orbiviruses, helping to explain why tick-borne orbiviruses have a ~1 kb smaller genome.

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