BMC Genomics (Mar 2018)

Comparative genomic, transcriptomic, and proteomic reannotation of human herpesvirus 6

  • Alexander L. Greninger,
  • Giselle M. Knudsen,
  • Pavitra Roychoudhury,
  • Derek J. Hanson,
  • Ruth Hall Sedlak,
  • Hong Xie,
  • Jon Guan,
  • Thuy Nguyen,
  • Vikas Peddu,
  • Michael Boeckh,
  • Meei-Li Huang,
  • Linda Cook,
  • Daniel P. Depledge,
  • Danielle M. Zerr,
  • David M. Koelle,
  • Soren Gantt,
  • Tetsushi Yoshikawa,
  • Mary Caserta,
  • Joshua A. Hill,
  • Keith R. Jerome

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12864-018-4604-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
pp. 1 – 17

Abstract

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Abstract Background Human herpesvirus-6A and -6B (HHV-6) are betaherpesviruses that reach > 90% seroprevalence in the adult population. Unique among human herpesviruses, HHV-6 can integrate into the subtelomeric regions of human chromosomes; when this occurs in germ line cells it causes a condition called inherited chromosomally integrated HHV-6 (iciHHV-6). Only two complete genomes are available for replicating HHV-6B, leading to numerous conflicting annotations and little known about the global genomic diversity of this ubiquitous virus. Results Using a custom capture panel for HHV-6B, we report complete genomes from 61 isolates of HHV-6B from active infections (20 from Japan, 35 from New York state, and 6 from Uganda), and 64 strains of iciHHV-6B (mostly from North America). HHV-6B sequence clustered by geography and illustrated extensive recombination. Multiple iciHHV-6B sequences from unrelated individuals across the United States were found to be completely identical, consistent with a founder effect. Several iciHHV-6B strains clustered with strains from recent active pediatric infection. Combining our genomic analysis with the first RNA-Seq and shotgun proteomics studies of HHV-6B, we completely reannotated the HHV-6B genome, altering annotations for more than 10% of existing genes, with multiple instances of novel splicing and genes that hitherto had gone unannotated. Conclusion Our results are consistent with a model of intermittent de novo integration of HHV-6B into host germline cells during active infection with a large contribution of founder effect in iciHHV-6B. Our data provide a significant advance in the genomic annotation of HHV-6B, which will contribute to the detection, diversity, and control of this virus.

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