Publication | Open Access
Evolutionary and phenotypic analysis of live virus isolates suggests arthropod origin of a pathogenic RNA virus family
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Citations
29
References
2015
Year
Live Virus IsolatesPhylogenetic AnalysisViral EvolutionPhylogeneticsVirus PhylogenyVirus GeneViral GeneticsSignificance KnowledgePhenotypic AnalysisVirologyVirus ClassificationBiologyFamily BunyaviridaeNatural SciencesPathogenesisEvolutionary BiologyEmergent VirusVirus EmergenceMicrobiologyMedicineArthropod Origin
Significance Knowledge of the origin and evolution of viruses provides important insight into virus emergence involving the acquisition of genes necessary for the infection of new host species or the development of pathogenicity. The family Bunyaviridae contains important arthropod-borne pathogens of humans, animals, and plants. In this study, we provide a comprehensive characterization of two novel lineages of insect-specific bunyaviruses that are in basal phylogenetic relationship to the rodent-borne hantaviruses, the only genus within the Bunyaviridae that is not transmitted by arthropod vectors. These data, together with ancestral state reconstruction of bunyavirus hosts for major virus lineage bifurcations, suggest that the vertebrate-infecting viruses evolved from arthropod-specific progenitors.
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