Abstract

ABSTRACTOnly eight families of double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) viruses are known to infect vertebrate animals. During an investigation of papillomatous skin disease in an elasmobranch species, the giant guitarfish (Rhynchobatus djiddensis), a novel virus, distinct from all known viral families in regard to particle size, morphology, genome organization, and helicase phylogeny was discovered. Large inclusion bodies containing 75-nm icosahedral viral particles were present within epithelial cell nuclei in the proliferative skin lesions. Deep metagenomic sequencing revealed a 22-kb circular dsDNA viral genome, tentatively named guitarfish “adomavirus” (GAdoV), with only distant homology to two other fish viruses, Japanese eel endothelial cell-infecting virus (JEECV) and a recently reported marbled eel virus. Phylogenetic analysis of the helicase domain places the guitarfish virus in a novel clade that is equidistant between members of the Papillomaviridae and Polyomaviridae families. Specific PCR, quantitative PCR, and in situ hybridization were used to detect, quantify, and confirm that GAdoV DNA was localized to affected epithelial cell nuclei. Changes in the viral titer, as well as the presence of a hybridization signal, coincided with the progression and then final resolution of gross and microscopic lesions. The results indicate that GAdoV is the causative agent of the proliferative skin lesions.

Highlights

  • Eight families of double-stranded DNA viruses are known to infect vertebrate animals

  • Both viruses encode a large T antigen typical of polyomaviruses found in bony fish, the remainder of their ~15-kb circular double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) genomes showed little similarity to other known viral sequences

  • Giant guitarfish polyomavirus 1, was the first viral genome described from an elasmobranch species and represents the smallest known polyomavirus genome [11]

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Summary

Introduction

Eight families of double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) viruses are known to infect vertebrate animals. KEYWORDS cartilaginous fish, giant guitarfish, adomavirus, metagenomics, pathology, skin disease, virus discovery During an investigation into the etiology of a proliferative skin disease in a giant guitarfish [17], two viral genomes were identified.

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