Emerging Microbes and Infections (Dec 2018)

Evolutionary evidence for multi-host transmission of cetacean morbillivirus

  • Wendy K. Jo,
  • Jochen Kruppa,
  • Andre Habierski,
  • Marco van de Bildt,
  • Sandro Mazzariol,
  • Giovanni Di Guardo,
  • Ursula Siebert,
  • Thijs Kuiken,
  • Klaus Jung,
  • Albert Osterhaus,
  • Martin Ludlow

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41426-018-0207-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract Cetacean morbillivirus (CeMV) has emerged as the pathogen that poses the greatest risk of triggering epizootics in cetacean populations worldwide, and has a high propensity for interspecies transmission, including sporadic infection of seals. In this study, we investigated the evolutionary history of CeMV by deep sequencing wild-type viruses from tissue samples representing cetacean species with different spatiotemporal origins. Bayesian phylogeographic analysis generated an estimated evolutionary rate of 2.34 × 10−4 nucleotide substitutions/site/year and showed that CeMV evolutionary dynamics are neither host-restricted nor location-restricted. Moreover, the dolphin morbillivirus strain of CeMV has undergone purifying selection without evidence of species-specific mutations. Cell-to-cell fusion and growth kinetics assays demonstrated that CeMV can use both dolphin and seal CD150 as a cellular receptor. Thus, it appears that CeMV can readily spread among multiple cetacean populations and may pose an additional spillover risk to seals.