Comprehensive analysis of 66 complete molluscum contagiosum virus (MOCV) genomes: characterization and functional annotation of 47 novel complete MOCV genomes, including the first genome of MOCV genotype 3, and a proposal for harmonized MOCV genotyping indexing

Author:

Zorec Tomaž Mark1ORCID,Alm Erik2ORCID,Lind Karlberg Maria2ORCID,Advani Reza2ORCID,Hošnjak Lea1ORCID,Poljak Mario1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory for Molecular Microbiology and Slovenian HIV/AIDS Reference Center, Institute of Microbiology and Immunology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia

2. Department of Microbiology, Public Health Agency of Sweden, Solna, Sweden

Abstract

ABSTRACT Four molluscum contagiosum virus (MOCV) genotypes (MOCV1–4) and four subtype variants (MOCV1p, MOCV1va, MOCV1vb, and MOCV1vc) were partially characterized using restriction enzyme profiling in the early 1980s/1990s. However, complete genome sequences of only MOCV1 and MOCV2 are available. The evolutionary pathways of MOCV genotypes and subtype variants with unavailable sequences remain unclear, and also whether all MOCV genotypes/subtype variants can be reliably detected and appropriately categorized using available PCR-based protocols. We de novo fully characterized and functionally annotated 47 complete MOCV genomes, including two putative non-MOCV1/2 isolates, expanding the number of fully characterized MOCV genomes to 66. To ascertain the placement of any putative novel MOCV sequence into the restriction profiling typing scheme, we developed an original framework for extracting complete MOCV genome sequence-based restriction profiles and matching them with reference restriction profiles. We confirmed that two putative non-MOCV1/2 isolates represent the first complete genomes of MOCV3. Comprehensive phylogenomic, recombination, and restriction enzyme recognition site analysis of all 66 currently available MOCV genomes showed that they can be agglomerated into six phylogenetic subgroups (PG1–6), corresponding to the subtype variants from the pioneering studies. PG5 was a novel subtype variant of MOCV2, but no PGs corresponded to the subtype variants MOCV1vb or MOCV4. We showed that the phylogenetic subgroups may have diverged from the prototype MOCV genotype lineages following large-scale recombination events and hinted at partial sequence content of MOCV4 and direction of recombinant transfer in the events that spawned PG5 and the yet undetected subtype variant MOCV1vb. IMPORTANCE Four molluscum contagiosum virus (MOCV) genotypes (MOCV1–4) and four subtype variants were partially characterized using restriction enzyme profiling in the 1980s/1990s, but complete genome sequences of only MOCV1 and MOCV2 are available. The evolutionary pathways whereby genotypes/subtype variants with unavailable sequences emerged and whether all MOCVs can be detected using current diagnostic approaches remain unclear. We fully characterized 47 novel complete MOCV genomes, including the first complete MOCV3 genome, expanding the number of fully characterized genomes to 66. For reliably classifying the novel non-MOCV1/2 genomes, we developed and validated a framework for matching sequence-derived restriction maps with those defining MOCV subtypes in pioneering studies. Six phylogenetic subgroups (PG1–6) were identified, PG5 representing a novel MOCV2 subtype. The phylogenetic subgroups diverged from the prototype lineages following large-scale recombination events and hinted at partial sequence content of MOCV4 and direction of recombinant transfer in the events spawning PG5 and yet undetected MOCV1vb variant.

Funder

Javna Agencija za Raziskovalno Dejavnost RS

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Virology,Microbiology

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