| Literature DB >> 32651267 |
Sofia Paraskevopoulou1, Fabian Pirzer1, Nora Goldmann2,3,4, Julian Schmid5,6, Victor Max Corman1,7, Lina Theresa Gottula1, Simon Schroeder1, Andrea Rasche1,7, Doreen Muth1, Jan Felix Drexler1,7,8, Alexander Christoph Heni5,6, Georg Joachim Eibner1,5,6, Rachel A Page6, Terry C Jones1,9, Marcel A Müller1,7,8, Simone Sommer10, Dieter Glebe11,3,4, Christian Drosten12,7.
Abstract
Hepatitis delta virus (HDV) is a human hepatitis-causing RNA virus, unrelated to any other taxonomic group of RNA viruses. Its occurrence as a satellite virus of hepatitis B virus (HBV) is a singular case in animal virology for which no consensus evolutionary explanation exists. Here we present a mammalian deltavirus that does not occur in humans, identified in the neotropical rodent species Proechimys semispinosus The rodent deltavirus is highly distinct, showing a common ancestor with a recently described deltavirus in snakes. Reverse genetics based on a tandem minus-strand complementary DNA genome copy under the control of a cytomegalovirus (CMV) promoter confirms autonomous genome replication in transfected cells, with initiation of replication from the upstream genome copy. In contrast to HDV, a large delta antigen is not expressed and the farnesylation motif critical for HBV interaction is absent from a genome region that might correspond to a hypothetical rodent large delta antigen. Correspondingly, there is no evidence for coinfection with an HBV-related hepadnavirus based on virus detection and serology in any deltavirus-positive animal. No other coinfecting viruses were detected by RNA sequencing studies of 120 wild-caught animals that could serve as a potential helper virus. The presence of virus in blood and pronounced detection in reproductively active males suggest horizontal transmission linked to competitive behavior. Our study establishes a nonhuman, mammalian deltavirus that occurs as a horizontally transmitted infection, is potentially cleared by immune response, is not focused in the liver, and possibly does not require helper virus coinfection.Entities:
Keywords: Proechimys semispinosus; coinfection; deltavirus; hepadnavirus; neotropical rodent
Year: 2020 PMID: 32651267 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2006750117
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205