Abstract

The type species of the genus Coltivirus, Colorado tick fever virus (CTFV), was discovered in 1943 and is the most common tick-borne viral infection in the Western US. Despite its long history, very little is known about the molecular diversity of viruses classified within the species Colorado tick fever coltivirus. Previous studies have suggested genetic variants and potential serotypes of CTFV, but limited genetic sequence information is available for CTFV strains. To address this knowledge gap, we report herein the full-length genomes of five strains of CTFV, including Salmon River virus and California hare coltivirus (CTFV-Ca). The sequence from the full-length genome of Salmon River virus identified a high genetic identity to the CTFV prototype strain with >90% amino acid identity in all the segments except segment four, suggesting Salmon River virus is a strain of the species Colorado tick fever coltivirus. Additionally, analysis suggests that segment four has been associated with reassortment in at least one strain. The CTFV-Ca full-length genomic sequence was highly variable from the prototype CTFV in all the segments. The genome of CTFV-Ca was most similar to the Eyach virus, including similar segments six and seven. These data suggest that CTFV-Ca is not a strain of CTFV but a unique species. Additional sequence information of CTFV strains will improve the molecular surveillance tools and provide additional taxonomic resolution to this understudied virus.

Highlights

  • The family Reoviridae is comprised of two subfamilies, Spinareovirdae and Sedoreoviridae [1]

  • River viruses in a well-supported monophyletic clade, while Colorado tick fever virus (CTFV)-Ca is in a clade with Eyach virus, with well-supported monophyletic clade, while

  • The genus Coltivirus has expanded in recent years to include newly described viruses as new species (Kundal virus, Tai Forest reovirus, and Tarumizu Tick virus); very little full-length sequence information has been available for the known viruses in the CTFV species complex, CTFV, Salmon River virus, and CTFV-Ca

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Summary

Introduction

The family Reoviridae is comprised of two subfamilies, Spinareovirdae and Sedoreoviridae [1]. The genus Coltivirus is one of nine genera in the subfamily Spinareroviridae, with two tick-borne viruses, Colorado tick fever virus (CTFV) and Eyach virus, representing the first viruses to comprise the genus [2]. Viruses belonging in the genus Coltivirus have genomes made of segments of double-stranded RNA, encoding for viral proteins (VP) 1–12 [3]. Segment nine of coltiviruses produces two proteins, VP9 and VP90 , via a readthrough of the termination codon [4]. Colorado tick fever virus was isolated in 1943 from a febrile patient and has subsequently been found to be distributed in North. Additional serotypes of CTFV have been described, including California hare coltivirus (referred to in the literature as CTFV-Ca) and Salmon

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