PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

A new species of mesonivirus from the Northern Territory, Australia.

  • David Warrilow,
  • Daniel Watterson,
  • Roy A Hall,
  • Steven S Davis,
  • Richard Weir,
  • Nina Kurucz,
  • Peter Whelan,
  • Richard Allcock,
  • Sonja Hall-Mendelin,
  • Caitlin A O'Brien,
  • Jody Hobson-Peters

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0091103
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 3
p. e91103

Abstract

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Here we describe Casuarina virus (CASV), a new virus in the family Mesoniviridae. This is the first report of a mesonivirus in Australia, which extends the geographical range of this virus family to 3 continents. The virus was isolated in 2010 from Coquillettidia xanthogaster mosquitoes during surveillance in the suburbs of Darwin, the capital of the Northern Territory. Cryo-electron microscopy of the CASV virions revealed spherical particles of 65 nm in size with large club-shaped projections of approximately 15 nm in length. The new virus was most closely related to Alphamesonivirus 1, the only currently recognized species in the family. In 2013 a further 5 putative new mesonivirus species were described: Hana, Méno, Nsé, Moumo and Dak Nong viruses. The evolutionary distance between CASV and two of its closest relatives, Cavally and Hana viruses (Jones-Taylor-Thornton distance of 0.151 and 0.224, respectively), along with its isolation from a different genus of mosquitoes captured on a separate continent indicate that CASV is a new species.