Diverse mosquito-specific flaviviruses in the Bolivian Amazon basin

Author:

Orba Yasuko12ORCID,Matsuno Keita31ORCID,Nakao Ryo4ORCID,Kryukov Kirill5ORCID,Saito Yumi2,Kawamori Fumihiko6,Loza Vega Ariel6,Watanabe Tokiko7,Maemura Tadashi8,Sasaki Michihito2ORCID,Hall William W.9101,Hall Roy A.11,Pereira Juan Antonio6,Nakagawa So12ORCID,Sawa Hirofumi912

Affiliation:

1. International Collaboration Unit, Research Center for Zoonosis Control, Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Japan

2. Division of Molecular Pathobiology, Research Center for Zoonosis Control, Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Japan

3. Unit of Risk Analysis and Management, Research Center for Zoonosis Control, Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Japan

4. Laboratory of Parasitology, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Japan

5. Department of Genomics and Evolutionary Biology, National Institute of Genetics, Shizuoka, Japan

6. Faculty of Veterinary Sciences, Gabriel Rene Moreno Autonomous University, Santa Cruz, Bolivia

7. Department of Molecular Virology, Research Institute for Microbial Diseases, Osaka University, Osaka, Japan

8. Department of Pathobiological Sciences, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin, USA

9. Global Virus Network, Baltimore, Maryland, USA

10. Centre for Research in Infectious Diseases, University College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland

11. Australian Infectious Diseases Research Centre, School of Chemistry and Molecular Biosciences, University of Queensland, St Lucia, Queensland, Australia

12. Department of Molecular Life Science, Tokai University School of Medicine, Kanagawa, Japan

Abstract

The genus Flavivirus includes a range of mosquito-specific viruses in addition to well-known medically important arboviruses. Isolation and comprehensive genomic analyses of viruses in mosquitoes collected in Bolivia resulted in the identification of three novel flavivirus species. Psorophora flavivirus (PSFV) was isolated from Psorophora albigenu. The coding sequence of the PSFV polyprotein shares 60 % identity with that of the Aedes-associated lineage II insect-specific flavivirus (ISF), Marisma virus. Isolated PSFV replicates in both Aedes albopictus- and Aedes aegypti-derived cells, but not in mammalian Vero or BHK-21 cell lines. Two other flaviviruses, Ochlerotatus scapularis flavivirus (OSFV) and Mansonia flavivirus (MAFV), which were identified from Ochlerotatus scapularis and Mansonia titillans, respectively, group with the classical lineage I ISFs. The protein coding sequences of these viruses share only 60 and 40 % identity with the most closely related of known lineage I ISFs, including Xishuangbanna aedes flavivirus and Sabethes flavivirus, respectively. Phylogenetic analysis suggests that MAFV is clearly distinct from the groups of the current known Culicinae-associated lineage I ISFs. Interestingly, the predicted amino acid sequence of the MAFV capsid protein is approximately two times longer than that of any of the other known flaviviruses. Our results indicate that flaviviruses with distinct features can be found at the edge of the Bolivian Amazon basin at sites that are also home to dense populations of human-biting mosquitoes.

Publisher

Microbiology Society

Subject

Virology

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