Viruses (Aug 2020)

Tick-Borne Encephalitis Virus Adaptation in Different Host Environments and Existence of Quasispecies

  • Renata Helmová,
  • Václav Hönig,
  • Hana Tykalová,
  • Martin Palus,
  • Lesley Bell-Sakyi,
  • Libor Grubhoffer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/v12080902
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 8
p. 902

Abstract

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A highly virulent strain (Hypr) of tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV) was serially subcultured in the mammalian porcine kidney stable (PS) and Ixodes ricinus tick (IRE/CTVM19) cell lines, producing three viral variants. These variants exhibited distinct plaque sizes and virulence in a mouse model. Comparing the full-genome sequences of all variants, several nucleotide changes were identified in different genomic regions. Furthermore, different sequential variants were revealed to co-exist within one sample as quasispecies. Interestingly, the above-mentioned nucleotide changes found within the whole genome sequences of the new variants were present alongside the nucleotide sequence of the parental strain, which was represented as a minority quasispecies. These observations further imply that TBEV exists as a heterogeneous population that contains virus variants pre-adapted to reproduction in different environments, probably enabling virus survival in ticks and mammals.

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