Abstract

Understanding the evolution of viral pathogens is critical to being able to define how viruses emerge within different landscapes. Host susceptibility, which is spread between different species and is a contributing factor to the subsequent epidemiology of a disease, is defined by virus detection and subsequent characterization. Peste des petits ruminants virus is a plague of small ruminant species that is a considerable burden to the development of sustainable agriculture across Africa and much of Asia. The virus has also had a significant impact on populations of endangered species in recent years, highlighting its significance as a pathogen of high concern across different regions of the globe. Here, we have re-evaluated the molecular evolution of this virus using novel genetic data to try and further resolve the molecular epidemiology of this disease. Viral isolates are genetically characterized into four lineages (I−IV), and the historic origin of these lineages is of considerable interest to the molecular evolution of the virus. Our re-evaluation of viral emergence using novel genome sequences has demonstrated that lineages I, II and IV likely originated in West Africa, in Senegal (I) and Nigeria (II and IV). Lineage III sequences predicted emergence in either East Africa (Ethiopia) or in the Arabian Peninsula (Oman and/or the United Arab Emirates), with a paucity of data precluding a more refined interpretation. Continual refinements of evolutionary emergence, following the generation of new data, is key to both understanding viral evolution from a historic perspective and informing on the ongoing genetic emergence of this virus.

Highlights

  • Peste des petits ruminants (PPR) constitutes a significant burden to sustainable agriculture across endemic areas, currently limited to Africa and Asia [1,2]

  • Both the Indian isolates studied in this investigation (PPRV/IND/HP/Chirgaon/99 and PPR virus (PPRV)/IND/HP/Palampur/16) were found to belong to lineage IV

  • Wherever new full genome sequences are defined, further utilization of evolutionary analyses is critical in enabling re-assessment of the genetic diversity and evolution of PPRV

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Summary

Introduction

Peste des petits ruminants (PPR) constitutes a significant burden to sustainable agriculture across endemic areas, currently limited to Africa and Asia [1,2]. Lineage I contains viruses from West Africa, with very few defined isolates that were believed to have become extinct; recent studies have suggested that lineage I PPRV persists in West Africa, despite the emergence of apparently more dominant lineages [4]. Lineage II is of West African origin, with historic isolates being described from Nigeria and Benin, with more contemporary detections being from West Africa. Lineage III consists of viruses detected in both the Arabian Peninsula and East Africa, more recent isolates have been described in East Africa. Lineage IV contains isolates that historically have an origin in Central Africa, but, for a long period of time, have been detected across Asia, in particular, India. Lineage IV viruses have been proposed as becoming dominant across endemic areas, and poorly understood, this factor is important when considering viral evolution

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