Discovery of a unique novel clade of mosquito-associated bunyaviruses

Marco Marklewitz, Florian Zirkel, Innocent B. Rwego, Hanna Heidemann, Pascal Trippner, Andreas Kurth, René Kallies, Thomas Briese, W. Ian Lipkin, Christian Drosten, Thomas R. Gillespie, Sandra Junglen

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

82 Scopus citations

Abstract

Bunyaviruses are the largest known family of RNA viruses, infecting vertebrates, insects, and plants. Here we isolated three novel bunyaviruses from mosquitoes sampled in Côte d'Ivoire, Ghana, and Uganda. The viruses define a highly diversified monophyletic sister clade to all members of the genus Orthobunyavirus and are virtually equidistant to orthobunyaviruses and tospoviruses. Maximal amino acid identities between homologous putative proteins of the novel group and orthobunyaviruses ranged between 12 and 25%. The type isolates, tentatively named Herbert virus (HEBV), Taï virus (TAIV), and Kibale virus (KIBV), comprised genomes with L, M, and S segments of about 7.4 kb, 2.7 kb, and 1.1 kb, respectively. HEBV, TAIV, and KIBV encode the shortest bunyavirusMsegments known and did not seem to encode NSs and NSm proteins but contained an elongated L segment with an ~500-nucleotide (nt) insertion that shows no identity to other bunyaviruses. The viruses replicated to high titers in insect cells but did not replicate in vertebrate cells. The enveloped virions were 90 to 110 nm in diameter and budded at cellular membranes with morphological features typical of the Golgi complex. Viral RNA recovered from infected cells showed 5'-terminal nontemplated sequences of 9 to 22 nt, suggestive of cap snatching during mRNA synthesis, as described for other bunyaviruses. Northern blotting identified RNA species of full and reduced lengths, suggested upon analogy with other bunyaviruses to constitute antigenomic-sense cRNA and transcript mRNAs, respectively. Functional studies will be necessary to determine if this group of viruses constitutes a novel genus in the bunyavirus family.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)12850-12865
Number of pages16
JournalJournal of virology
Volume87
Issue number23
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2013

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Discovery of a unique novel clade of mosquito-associated bunyaviruses'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this