| Literature DB >> 30120342 |
Antonio Charlys da Costa1, Adriana Luchs2, Flavio Augusto de Pádua Milagres3,4,5,6, Shirley Vasconcelos Komninakis7,8, Danielle Elise Gill9, Márcia Cristina Alves Brito Sayão Lobato4,6, Rafael Brustulin4,5,6, Rogério Togisaki das Chagas4,6, Maria de Fátima Neves Dos Santos Abrão4,6, Cassia Vitória de Deus Alves Soares4,6, Xutao Deng10,11, Ester Cerdeira Sabino9,3, Eric Delwart10,11, Élcio Leal12.
Abstract
In the present article we report the nearly full length genome of a Cosavirus strain (BRTO-83) isolated from a child with acute gastroenteritis, and who is an inhabitant of a rural area in the central region of Brazil. The sample was previously screened and negative for both: common enteric viruses (i.e. rotavirus and norovirus), bacteria, endoparasites and helminthes. Evolutionary analysis and phylogenetic inferences indicated that the Brazilian BRTO-83 Cosavirus strain was a recombinant virus highly related to the E/D recombinant NG385 strain (Genbank JN867757), which was isolated in Nigeria from an acute flaccid paralysis patient. This is the first report of a recombinant E/D Cosavirus strain detected in Brazil, and the second genome described worldwide. Further surveillance and molecular studies are required to fully understand the epidemiology, distribution and evolution of the Cosavirus.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30120342 PMCID: PMC6098101 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-30214-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Phylogenetic tree constructed using near-full-length genomes of the human cosaviruses. The Maximum likelihood tree was constructed with genomes of human strains of cosaviruses (HuCosaVirus). The Brazilian strain BRTO-83, described in this study, is indicated by a filled arrow. The values on the tree indicate the statistical support of each node that was calculated using the Shimodaira-Hasegawa test. Genotype reference strains are indicated by filled dots on the genome tree. The panel in the figure is a matrix that shows the values of genetic distances between some isolates. Values below the diagonal are genetic distances and values above the diagonal are standard errors. These distances were estimated using Mega software version 7.0.
Figure 2Recombination pattern of the Brazilian isolate BRTO-83. Colored lines represent the probability (given in bootstrap value) that genomic regions belong to a certain parental genotype. The x-axis represents the sequence length in base pairs (bp). The y-axis represents the statistical support (bootstrap) based on 500 replicates. Each plotted line refers to a certain genotype (see the code color on the small panel). A vertical arrow indicates the recombination break point on the genome region. The plot indicates a single breakpoint in the polyprotein region of the isolate BRTO-83 at the position 2798. This breakpoint corresponds to the initial part of the Cosavirus protein P1 (see diagram below the recombination plot). Strains used as parental references are also shown in the recombination plot. Trees were constructed using the partitioned genome. The first partition tree (nucleotides; 1–2798) demonstrates the isolate BRTO-83 clustering with genotype E (left tree), and the second tree (nucleotides 2799–6269) demonstates the isolate BRTO-83 within the clade formed by genotype D strains (right tree). Genotype reference strains are indicated by filled dots on the genome tree. The recombinant strain NG385 is indicated by gray triangles in the trees. Analyses were performed using a neighbor-joining method and a Kimura 2 parameters model in windows of 250 bp sliding along sequences in increments of 40 bp. For parental references, non-recombinant sequences were used. The boostscan plot was obtained by analysis performed using RDP v.4 software.