21 research outputs found

    Viral meningitis epidemics and a single, recent, recombinant and anthroponotic origin of swine vesicular disease virus

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    Background and objectives: Swine vesicular disease virus (SVDV) is a close relative of the human Enterovirus B serotype, coxsackievirus B5. As the etiological agent of a significant emergent veterinary disease, several studies have attempted to explain its origin. However, several key questions remain, including the full biological ancestry of the virus, and its geographical and temporal origin. Methodology: We sequenced near-complete genomes of 27 SVDV and 13 coxsackievirus B5 samples, all originally isolated between 1966 and 2006, and analysed these in conjunction with existing sequences and historical information. Results: While analyses incorporating 24 additional near-complete SVDV genomic sequences indicate clear signs of within-SVDV recombination, all 51 SVDV isolates remain monophyletic. This supports a hypothesis of a single anthroponotic transfer origin. Analysis of individual coding and non-coding regions supports that SVDV has a recombinant origin between coxsackievirus B5 and another Enterovirus B serotype, most likely coxsackievirus A9. Extensive Bayesian sequence-based analysis of the time of the most recent common ancestor of all analysed sequences places this within a few years around 1961. Epidemiological evidence points to China as an origin, but there are no available samples to test this conclusively. Conclusions and implications: Historical investigation and the clinical aspects of the involved Enterovirus B serotypes, makes the current results consistent with a hypothesis stating that SVDV originated through co-infection, recombination, and a single anthroponotic event, during large viral meningitis epidemics around 1960/1961 involving the ancestral serotypes. The exact geographical origin of SVDV may remain untestable due to historical aspects

    Palaeogenomic insights into the origins of French grapevine diversity

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    Ramos-Madrigal, Jazmín, Runge, Anne Kathrine Wiborg, Bouby, Laurent, Lacombe, Thierry, Castruita, José Alfredo Samaniego, Adam-Blondon, Anne-Françoise, Figueiral, Isabel, Hallavant, Charlotte, Martínez-Zapater, José M., Schaal, Caroline, Töpfer, Reinhard, Petersen, Bent, Sicheritz-Pontén, Thomas, This, Patrice, Bacilieri, Roberto, Gilbert, M. Thomas P., Wales, Nathan (2019): Palaeogenomic insights into the origins of French grapevine diversity. Nature Plants 5: 595-603, DOI: 10.1038/s41477-019-0437-

    Reconstructing genome evolution in historic samples of the Irish potato famine pathogen

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    Responsible for the Irish potato famine of 1845–49, the oomycete pathogen Phytophthora infestans caused persistent, devastating outbreaks of potato late blight across Europe in the 19th century. Despite continued interest in the history and spread of the pathogen, the genome of the famine-era strain remains entirely unknown. Here we characterize temporal genomic changes in introduced P. infestans. We shotgun sequence five 19th-century European strains from archival herbarium samples—including the oldest known European specimen, collected in 1845 from the first reported source of introduction. We then compare their genomes to those of extant isolates. We report multiple distinct genotypes in historical Europe and a suite of infection-related genes different from modern strains. At virulence-related loci, several now-ubiquitous genotypes were absent from the historical gene pool. At least one of these genotypes encodes a virulent phenotype in modern strains, which helps explain the 20th century’s episodic replacements of European P. infestans lineages

    New approaches to the mapping and assembly of genomic data

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