Abstract

Siadenoviruses have been detected in wild and captive birds worldwide. Only nine siadenoviruses have been fully sequenced; however, partial sequences for 30 others, many of these from wild Australian birds, are also described. Some siadenoviruses, e.g., the turkey siadenovirus A, can cause disease; however, most cause subclinical infections. An example of a siadenovirus causing predominately subclinical infections is psittacine siadenovirus 2, proposed name psittacine siadenovirus F (PsSiAdV-F), which is enzootic in the captive breeding population of the critically endangered orange-bellied parrot (OBP, Neophema chrysogaster). Here, we have fully characterised PsSiAdV-F from an OBP. The PsSiAdV-F genome is 25,392 bp in length and contained 25 putative genes. The genome architecture of PsSiAdV-F exhibited characteristics similar to members within the genus Siadenovirus; however, the novel PsSiAdV-F genome was highly divergent, showing highest and lowest sequence similarity to skua siadenovirus A (57.1%) and psittacine siadenovirus D (31.1%), respectively. Subsequent phylogenetic analyses of the novel PsSiAdV-F genome positioned the virus into a phylogenetically distinct sub-clade with all other siadenoviruses and did not show any obvious close evolutionary relationship. Importantly, the resulted tress continually demonstrated that novel PsSiAdV-F evolved prior to all known members except the frog siadenovirus A in the evolution and possibly the ancestor of the avian siadenoviruses. To date, PsSiAdV-F has not been detected in wild parrots, so further studies screening PsSiAdV-F in wild Australian parrots and generating whole genome sequences of siadenoviruses of Australian native passerine species is recommended to fill the siadenovirus evolutionary gaps.

Highlights

  • The genus Siadenovirus is one of six adenoviruses families

  • We demonstrated that it forms a monophyletic clade that is basal to all other known avian siadenoviruses, suggesting that the avian siadenoviruses originated in psittacine birds, possibly in Australia

  • The PsSiAdV-F complete genome from the endangered OBP contained all the conserved coding genes expected within members of the genus Siadenovirus and two identical inverted terminal repeats (ITRs) capping the genome

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Summary

Introduction

The genus Siadenovirus is one of six adenoviruses families (reviewed in Harrach et al [1,2]). Avian siadenoviruses have been detected in wild birds from three continents— Antarctic [6,7], Australia [5,8], and Europe [9]—and in captive birds originating from Africa [9,10], Asia [10,11], the Indo-Pacific [10,11], including Australia [12,13], and South America [10,14]. This means that only a skeletal phylogram for the avian siadneoviruses can be calculated and the relationships of the avian siadenoviruses with limited sequence data to other siadenovirus can only be approximated [5]

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