Geographic patterns of koala retrovirus genetic diversity, endogenization, and subtype distributions

Author:

Blyton Michaela D. J.123,Young Paul R.13ORCID,Moore Ben D.2ORCID,Chappell Keith J.13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Chemistry and Molecular Biosciences, The University of Queensland, St. Lucia, QLD 4072, Australia

2. Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment, Western Sydney University, Richmond, NSW 2753, Australia

3. Australian Institute for Bioengineering and Nanotechnology, The University of Queensland, St. Lucia, QLD 4072, Australia

Abstract

Koala retrovirus (KoRV) subtype A (KoRV-A) is currently in transition from exogenous virus to endogenous viral element, providing an ideal system to elucidate retroviral–host coevolution. We characterized KoRV geography using fecal DNA from 192 samples across 20 populations throughout the koala’s range. We reveal an abrupt change in KoRV genetics and incidence at the Victoria/New South Wales state border. In northern koalas, pol gene copies were ubiquitously present at above five per cell, consistent with endogenous KoRV. In southern koalas, pol copies were detected in only 25.8% of koalas and always at copy numbers below one, while the env gene was detected in all animals and in a majority at copy numbers above one per cell. These results suggest that southern koalas carry partial endogenous KoRV-like sequences. Deep sequencing of the env hypervariable region revealed three putatively endogenous KoRV-A sequences in northern koalas and a single, distinct sequence present in all southern koalas. Among northern populations, env sequence diversity decreased with distance from the equator, suggesting infectious KoRV-A invaded the koala genome in northern Australia and then spread south. The exogenous KoRV subtypes (B to K), two novel subtypes, and intermediate subtypes were detected in all northern koala populations but were strikingly absent from all southern animals tested. Apart from KoRV subtype D, these exogenous subtypes were generally locally prevalent but geographically restricted, producing KoRV genetic differentiation among northern populations. This suggests that sporadic evolution and local transmission of the exogenous subtypes have occurred within northern Australia, but this has not extended into animals within southern Australia.

Funder

ARC Discovery Project

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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