| Literature DB >> 33870470 |
Romain Daveu1,2, Caroline Hervet1, Louane Sigrist1, Davide Sassera2, Aaron Jex3,4, Karine Labadie5, Jean-Marc Aury6, Olivier Plantard1, Claude Rispe7.
Abstract
We studied a group of tick-associated viruses with characteristics of members of the family Iflaviridae, a family of viruses frequently found in arthropods. Our aim was to gain insight into the evolutionary dynamics of this group of viruses, which may be linked to the biology of ticks. We explored assembled RNA-Seq data sets for different species of ticks. We identified members of five different iflavirus species, four of them novel, and discovered nine new genome sequences, including variants. Five variants represented a virus species associated with Ixodes ricinus. Unexpectedly, a sequence found in the Ixodes scapularis cell line ISE6 was nearly identical to the sequences of I. ricinus variants, suggesting a contamination of this cell line by I. ricinus material. Analysing patterns of substitutions between these variants, we detected a strong excess of synonymous mutations, suggesting evolution under strong positive selection. The phylogenies of the viruses and of their tick hosts were not congruent, suggesting recurrent host changes across tick genera during their evolution. Overall, our work constitutes a step in the understanding of the interactions between this family of viruses and ticks.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33870470 PMCID: PMC8195936 DOI: 10.1007/s00705-021-05060-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Virol ISSN: 0304-8608 Impact factor: 2.574
List of iflavirus sequences found in tick transcriptomes (with tblastn or blastp, using the ISIV polyprotein sequence as a query). Columns: Species, Tissues (HEM: haematocytes, MG: midgut, MT: Malpighian tubules, OV: ovaries, SG: salivary glands, SYN: synganglion, WB: whole bodies) followed by details on the stages or conditions between parentheses, when available, Location of the sampling (or source of the strains), Accessions: GenBank accessions, protein and nucleotide, and if available, related TSA or BioProject accession between parentheses, Publication (or authors of the sequences), Percent identity with ISIV -% id at the amino acid level of the first hsp (tblastn)- and query range of the match. Lines in bold correspond to the nine iflavirus genome sequences newly discovered in the present study. For HydromIV, the sequence used was a corrected contig sequence
| Species | Tissues and conditions | Location | Accession numbers | Publication | Identity | Match range(s) | Virus name |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| WB (wild questing ticks) | NY and Connecticut, USA | ASU47553.1, KX774633.1 | Tokarz et al. 2018 | 65.8% | 1142-2838 | Lone star tick dicistrovirus | |
| WB | Japan | BBK20270.1, LC483655.1 | Kobayashi et al. 2020 | 45.6% | 63-2937 | HflFV | |
| WB | China | APG77501.1, KX883729.1 | Shi et al. 2016 | 48.4% | 379-2990 | Bole Hyalomma asiaticum | |
| SG,WB,MG | QLD and NSW, Australia | AQZ42314.1, KY020412.1 (GIBQ01) | O'Brien et al. 2018 | 62.2% | 1-2989 | IhIV | |
| Cell line ISE6 | - | BBD75427.1, LC094426.1 | Nakao et al. 2017 | 100.0% | 1-2991 | ISIV | |
| WB | Antartic peninsula | QIS88066.1, MT025175.1 | Wille et al. 2020 | 42.0% | 383-2991 | Gerbovich virus | |
| Pool of tick species | WB | China | YP_009336552.1, NC_032764.1 | Shi et al. 2016 | 38.6% | 381-2991 | Ht-V1 |
| Pool of tick species | WB | China | YP_009336542.1, NC_032758.1 | Shi et al. 2016 | 44.3% | 391-2991 | Ht-V2 |
| Pool of tick species | WB | China | YP_009336533.1, NC_032751.1 | Shi et al. 2016 | 46.1% | 63-2989 | Ht-V3 |
Percentage of amino acid identity between iflavirus polyprotein sequences, for each pair of sequences included in our study. In bold, sequences newly identified in this work. Values shaded in gray indicates identity above 90%, defining sequences that belong to the same species based on species delineation criteria of iflaviruses.
Fig. 1Genome organization of the four novel tick-associated iflaviruses discovered in this study, respectively found in Ixodes ricinus (IricIV-1), Hyalomma dromedarii (HydromIV), Ixodes frontalis (IfronIV), and Ixodes vespertilionis (IvespIV). ORFs were predicted and domains were searched with Interproscan [34]. Predicted domains are shown as grey bars.
Fig. 2A. Maximum-likelihood phylogenetic tree of tick-associated iflaviruses. The tree was based on the amino acid sequence of iflavirus sequences found in the transcriptomes of different hard tick species (Acari; Parasitiformes; Ixodida; Ixodidae) and rooted with two outgroups, a honey bee iflavirus (deformed wing virus [DWV]) and an iflavirus associated with Tetranychus truncatus (Acari; Acariformes; Prostigmata), TtruIV. The host taxon is indicated in brackets. Details related to each taxon are given in Table 1. Taxon names in bold correspond to the nine iflavirus sequences discovered in the present study. Bootstrap support is indicated at the nodes. B. Expected topology of the phylogenetic tree of arthropod hosts of iflaviruses included in this study, based on reference 13 and on the delimitation of the two groups recognized within the family Ixodidae (Prostriata and Metastriata).
Fig. 3Test of the congruence between the phylogenies of tick-associated iflaviruses and of tick hosts, using Jane 4. This tree contains only part of the sequences analysed in Fig. 2 (three virus genomes found in pools of tick species could not be included). Iric-ISIV represents iflavirus sequences found either in I. ricinus or in a cell line of I. scapularis (these sequences being nearly identical). Open circles at the nodes indicate cophylogeny, HS and solid colored circles, red or yellow, indicate a host shift, FD indicates a failure to diverge
Pairwise distances among complete genomes of iflavirus associated with Ixodes ricinus (five variants, IricIV-1 to 5, first identified in the present study) or the I. scapularis cell line ISE6 (ISIV). Number of base substitutions per site (Maximum composite likelihood model, 8,976 positions) followed by number of amino acid substitutions per site (Poisson correction model, 2,991 positions). Analyses were conducted with MegaX
| IricIV-1 | IricIV-2 | IricIV-3 | IricIV-4 | IricIV-5 | ISIV | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IricIV-1 | ||||||
| IricIV-2 | 0.059 / 0.015 | |||||
| IricIV-3 | 0.078 / 0.020 | 0.064 / 0.015 | ||||
| IricIV-4 | 0.060 / 0.016 | 0.010 / 0.004 | 0.066 / 0.016 | |||
| IricIV-5 | 0.076 / 0.019 | 0.065 / 0.015 | 0.028 / 0.006 | 0.066 / 0.017 | ||
| ISIV | 0.077 / 0.024 | 0.049 / 0.016 | 0.065 / 0.019 | 0.050 / 0.017 | 0.062 / 0.019 |
Relative abundance of an iflavirus associated with I. ricinus, in different field populations and life-stages. Abundance was assessed by read counts per million in different RNA-Seq libraries, comparing A) different field populations (each library was obtained from a pool of 50 nymphs), data from BioProject PRJNA662080 B) different life-stages and conditions, for a lab-reared strain, data from BioProject PRJNA595586. A dot indicates a negative library (i.e. less than the one read per million threshold), where the virus is presumed absent from the pool of individuals