Emerging Infectious Diseases (Oct 2015)

Evolutionary and Ecological Characterization of Mayaro Virus Strains Isolated during an Outbreak, Venezuela, 2010

  • Albert J. Auguste,
  • Jonathan Liria,
  • Naomi L. Forrester,
  • Dileyvic Giambalvo,
  • Maria Moncada,
  • Kanya C. Long,
  • Dulce Morón,
  • Nuris de Manzione,
  • Robert B. Tesh,
  • Eric S. Halsey,
  • Tadeusz J. Kochel,
  • Rosa Hernandez,
  • Juan-Carlos Navarro,
  • Nikos Vasilakis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2110.141660
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 10
pp. 1742 – 1750

Abstract

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In 2010, an outbreak of febrile illness with arthralgic manifestations was detected at La Estación village, Portuguesa State, Venezuela. The etiologic agent was determined to be Mayaro virus (MAYV), a reemerging South American alphavirus. A total of 77 cases was reported and 19 were confirmed as seropositive. MAYV was isolated from acute-phase serum samples from 6 symptomatic patients. We sequenced 27 complete genomes representing the full spectrum of MAYV genetic diversity, which facilitated detection of a new genotype, designated N. Phylogenetic analysis of genomic sequences indicated that etiologic strains from Venezuela belong to genotype D. Results indicate that MAYV is highly conserved genetically, showing ≈17% nucleotide divergence across all 3 genotypes and 4% among genotype D strains in the most variable genes. Coalescent analyses suggested genotypes D and L diverged ≈150 years ago and genotype diverged N ≈250 years ago. This virus commonly infects persons residing near enzootic transmission foci because of anthropogenic incursions.

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