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Genetic, Morphological and Antigenic Relationships between Mesonivirus Isolates from Australian Mosquitoes and Evidence for Their Horizontal Transmission

Authors :
Natalee D. Newton
Agathe M. G. Colmant
Caitlin A. O’Brien
Emma Ledger
Devina Paramitha
Helle Bielefeldt-Ohmann
Daniel Watterson
Breeanna J. McLean
Sonja Hall-Mendelin
David Warrilow
Andrew F. van den Hurk
Wenjun Liu
Christina Hoare
Joanne R. Kizu
Penelope J. Gauci
John Haniotis
Stephen L. Doggett
Babak Shaban
Cheryl A. Johansen
Roy A. Hall
Jody Hobson-Peters
Source :
Viruses, Vol 12, Iss 10, p 1159 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2020.

Abstract

The Mesoniviridae are a newly assigned family of viruses in the order Nidovirales. Unlike other nidoviruses, which include the Coronaviridae, mesoniviruses are restricted to mosquito hosts and do not infect vertebrate cells. To date there is little information on the morphological and antigenic characteristics of this new group of viruses and a dearth of mesonivirus-specific research tools. In this study we determined the genetic relationships of recent Australian isolates of Alphamesonivirus 4 (Casuarina virus—CASV) and Alphamesonivirus 1 (Nam Dinh virus—NDiV), obtained from multiple mosquito species. Australian isolates of NDiV showed high-level similarity to the prototype NDiV isolate from Vietnam (99% nucleotide (nt) and amino acid (aa) identity). Isolates of CASV from Central Queensland were genetically very similar to the prototype virus from Darwin (95–96% nt and 91–92% aa identity). Electron microscopy studies demonstrated that virion diameter (≈80 nm) and spike length (≈10 nm) were similar for both viruses. Monoclonal antibodies specific to CASV and NDiV revealed a close antigenic relationship between the two viruses with 13/34 mAbs recognising both viruses. We also detected NDiV RNA on honey-soaked nucleic acid preservation cards fed on by wild mosquitoes supporting a possible mechanism of horizontal transmission between insects in nature.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19994915
Volume :
12
Issue :
10
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Viruses
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.855817e01bc4b3c90db22364f3e813b
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/v12101159