Emerging Infectious Diseases (Aug 2017)

Maguari Virus Associated with Human Disease

  • Allison Groseth,
  • Veronica Vine,
  • Carla Weisend,
  • Carolina Guevara,
  • Douglas Watts,
  • Brandy Russell,
  • Robert B. Tesh,
  • Hideki Ebihara

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2308.161254
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 8
pp. 1325 – 1331

Abstract

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Despite the lack of evidence for symptomatic human infection with Maguari virus (MAGV), its close relation to Cache Valley virus (CVV), which does infect humans, remains a concern. We sequenced the complete genome of a MAGV-like isolate (OBS6657) obtained from a febrile patient in Pucallpa, Ucayali, Peru, in 1998. To facilitate its classification, we generated additional full-length sequences for the MAGV prototype strain, 3 additional MAGV-like isolates, and the closely related CVV (7 strains), Tlacotalpan (1 strain), Playas (3 strains), and Fort Sherman (1 strain) viruses. The OBS6657 isolate is similar to the MAGV prototype, whereas 2 of the other MAGV-like isolates are located on a distinct branch and most likely warrant classification as a separate virus species and 1 is, in fact, a misclassified CVV strain. Our findings provide clear evidence that MAGV can cause human disease.

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