Phylogenetic Analysis of Buggy Creek Virus: Evidence for Multiple Clades in the Western Great Plains, United States of America

Author:

Pfeffer Martin1,Foster Jerome E.2,Edwards Eric A.3,Brown Mary Bomberger2,Komar Nicholas3,Brown Charles R.2

Affiliation:

1. Bundeswehr Institute of Microbiology, Neuherbergstrasse 11, 80937 Munich, Germany

2. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Tulsa, Tulsa, Oklahoma 74104

3. Division of Vector-Borne Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, P.O. Box 2087, Fort Collins, Colorado 80522

Abstract

ABSTRACT We present the first detailed phylogenetic analysis of Buggy Creek virus (BCRV), a poorly known alphavirus with transmission cycles involving a cimicid swallow bug ( Oeciacus vicarius ) vector and cliff swallows ( Petrochelidon pyrrhonota ) and house sparrows ( Passer domesticus ) as the principal avian hosts. Nucleotide sequences of a 2,075-bp viral envelope glycoprotein-coding region, covering the entire PE2 gene, were determined for 33 BCRV isolates taken from swallow bugs at cliff swallow colonies in Nebraska and Colorado in the summer of 2001 and were compared with the corresponding region of BCRV isolates collected from Oklahoma in the 1980s. We also analyzed isolates of the closely related Fort Morgan virus (FMV) collected from Colorado in the 1970s. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that BCRV falls into the western equine encephalomyelitis complex of alphaviruses, in agreement with antigenic results and a previous alphavirus phylogeny based on the E1 coding region. We found four distinct BCRV/FMV clades, one each unique to Nebraska, Colorado, and Oklahoma and one containing isolates from both Nebraska and Colorado. BCRV isolates within the two clades from Nebraska showed 5.7 to 6.2% nucleotide divergence and 0.7 to 1.9% amino acid divergence, and within these clades, we found multiple subclades. Nebraska subclades tended to be confined to one or a few cliff swallow colonies that were close to each other in space, although in some cases, near-identical isolates were detected at sites up to 123 km apart. Viral gene flow occurs when cliff swallows move (bugs) between colony sites, and the genetic structure of BCRV may reflect the limited dispersal abilities of its insect vector.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology

Reference41 articles.

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2. Brown, C. R., and M. B. Brown. 1986. Ectoparasitism as a cost of coloniality in cliff swallows (Hirundo pyrrhonota). Ecology67:1206-1218.

3. Brown, C. R., and M. B. Brown. 1992. Ectoparasitism as a cause of natal dispersal in cliff swallows. Ecology73:1718-1723.

4. Brown, C. R., and M. B. Brown. 1995. Cliff swallow (Hirundo pyrrhonota), no. 149. In A. Poole and F. Gill (ed.), Birds of North America. Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia, Pa.

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