Abstract

The advent of unbiased metagenomic virus discovery has revolutionized studies of virus biodiversity and evolution. Despite this, our knowledge of the virosphere, including in mammalian species, remains limited. We used unbiased metagenomic sequencing to identify RNA viruses in European field voles and rabbits. Accordingly, we identified a number of novel RNA viruses including astrovirus, rotavirus A, picorna-like virus and a narmovirus (paramyxovirus). In addition, we identified a sobemovirus and a novel luteovirus that likely originated from the rabbit diet. These newly discovered viruses were often divergent from those previously described. The novel astrovirus was most closely related to a virus sampled from the rodent-eating European roller bird (Coracias garrulous). PCR screening revealed that the novel narmovirus in the UK field vole had a prevalence of approximately 4%, and shared common ancestry with other rodent narmoviruses sampled globally. Two novel rotavirus A sequences were detected in a UK field vole and a French rabbit, the latter with a prevalence of 5%. Finally, a highly divergent picorna-like virus found in the gut of the French rabbit virus was only ~35% similar to an arilivirus at the amino acid level, suggesting the presence of a novel viral genus within the Picornaviridae.

Highlights

  • RNA viruses likely infect every species of cellular life [1]

  • Screening with primers specific for the rotavirus A that was identified in the French rabbit L232 was performed on 268 rabbit intestinal wash samples collected from 10 departments of France

  • The rabbit L232 had the highest abundance of viral reads ranging between 0.0008% and 0.19%, followed by the field vole UKMa K4D with 0.0003–0.002% and the field vole UKMa1 with 0.00004–0.0002% (Figure 2A,B)

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Summary

Introduction

RNA viruses likely infect every species of cellular life [1]. Due to their potential and sometimes profound impact on public health and the agricultural industries, most attention has understandably been directed toward those viruses that affect humans and economically important animals and plants. Our knowledge of the diversity, evolution and functional biology of RNA viruses infecting a wider range of host species is limited. This major sampling bias has been in part addressed by recent studies reporting the discovery of a multitude of new invertebrates and vertebrate. Lagomorphs are closely related to rodents, comprise only 89 extant species including rabbits and hares [16]

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