Rapid taxonomic categorization of short, abundant virus sequences for ecological analyses

Author:

Sjodin Anna R.1ORCID,Willig Michael R.12,Rodríguez‐Durán Armando3,Anthony Simon J.45

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology University of Connecticut Storrs Connecticut USA

2. Center for Environmental Sciences & Engineering and Institute of the Environment University of Connecticut Storrs Connecticut USA

3. Mata de Plátano Field Station Universidad Interamericana de Puerto Rico Bayamon Puerto Rico USA

4. Center for Infection and Immunity Columbia University New York New York USA

5. Department of Pathology, Microbiology, and Immunology UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine Davis California USA

Abstract

AbstractPublic health concerns about recent viral epidemics have motivated researchers to seek novel ways to understand pathogen infection in native, wildlife hosts. With its deep history of tools and perspectives for understanding the abundance and distribution of organisms, ecology can shed new light on viral infection dynamics. However, datasets allowing deep explorations of viral communities from an ecological perspective are lacking. We sampled 1086 bats from two, adjacent Puerto Rican caves and tested them for infection by herpesviruses, resulting in 3131 short, viral sequences. Using percent identity of nucleotides and a machine learning algorithm (affinity propagation), we categorized herpesviruses into 43 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) to be used in place of species in subsequent ecological analyses. Herpesvirus metacommunities demonstrated long‐tailed rank frequency distributions at all analyzed levels of host organization (i.e., individual, population, and community). Although 13 herpesvirus OTUs were detected in more than one host species, OTUs generally exhibited host specificity by infecting a single core host species at a significantly higher prevalence than in all satellite species combined. We describe the natural history of herpesvirus metacommunities in Puerto Rican bats and suggest that viruses follow the general law that communities comprise few common and many rare species. To guide future efforts in the field of viral ecology, hypotheses are presented regarding mechanisms that contribute to these patterns.

Funder

Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene

United States Agency for International Development

Publisher

Wiley

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