Diversifying selection identified in immune epitopes of bovine coronavirus isolates from Irish cattle

Author:

Russell Tristan12ORCID,Lozano Jose Maria3,Challinor Cailyn2,Barry Gerald2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Experimental Pathogen Host Research (CEPHR), University College Dublin, Dublin, Dublin 4, Ireland

2. UCD School of Veterinary Medicine, University College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland

3. Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine, Central Veterinary Research Laboratory, Celbridge, Ireland

Abstract

Bovine betacoronavirus (BoCoV) is a pneumoenteric pathogen of cattle that is closely related to human coronavirus OC43. Vaccines are administered to protect against diseases caused by BoCoV, but knowledge gaps exist with regard to correlates of protection and the effect of immune evasion on driving evolution. In this study, immune epitopes were mapped onto BoCoV structural proteins, including spike and haemagglutinin esterase (HE), and then supported with targeted gene sequencing of Irish clinical isolates and selective pressure analysis. Increased prevalence of diversifying selection and amino acid changes in some mapped immune epitopes suggests that immune escape is selecting for non-synonymous mutations arising in these regions. Selection analysis and sequencing provided increased support for neutralising antibody (nAb) epitopes compared to others, suggesting that nAbs are an important arm of the immune response to BoCoV. Phylogenetic analysis of spike and HE sequences showed that Irish isolates from this study were in the European clade, except for one HE sequence that sat in the Asian/American clade, while the spike gene of this sample was in the European clade. Recombination between a European and an Asian/American isolate would give rise to such a sequence. This study has gathered evidence suggesting that pressure to evade the nAb response is contributing to BoCoV evolution.

Funder

Irish Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine

Publisher

Microbiology Society

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