Abstract

BackgroundAll viruses in the family Bunyaviridae possess a tripartite genome, consisting of a small, a medium, and a large RNA segment. Bunyaviruses therefore possess considerable evolutionary potential, attributable to both intramolecular changes and to genome segment reassortment. Hantaviruses (family Bunyaviridae, genus Hantavirus) are known to cause human hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome or hantavirus pulmonary syndrome. The primary reservoir host of Sin Nombre virus is the deer mouse (Peromyscus maniculatus), which is widely distributed in North America. We investigated the prevalence of intramolecular changes and of genomic reassortment among Sin Nombre viruses detected in deer mice in three western states.MethodsPortions of the Sin Nombre virus small (S) and medium (M) RNA segments were amplified by RT-PCR from kidney, lung, liver and spleen of seropositive peromyscine rodents, principally deer mice, collected in Colorado, New Mexico and Montana from 1995 to 2007. Both a 142 nucleotide (nt) amplicon of the M segment, encoding a portion of the G2 transmembrane glycoprotein, and a 751 nt amplicon of the S segment, encoding part of the nucleocapsid protein, were cloned and sequenced from 19 deer mice and from one brush mouse (P. boylii), S RNA but not M RNA from one deer mouse, and M RNA but not S RNA from another deer mouse.ResultsTwo of 20 viruses were found to be reassortants. Within virus sequences from different rodents, the average rate of synonymous substitutions among all pair-wise comparisons (πs) was 0.378 in the M segment and 0.312 in the S segment sequences. The replacement substitution rate (πa) was 7.0 × 10-4 in the M segment and 17.3 × 10-4 in the S segment sequences. The low πa relative to πs suggests strong purifying selection and this was confirmed by a Fu and Li analysis. The absolute rate of molecular evolution of the M segment was 6.76 × 10-3 substitutions/site/year. The absolute age of the M segment tree was estimated to be 37 years. In the S segment the rate of molecular evolution was 1.93 × 10-3 substitutions/site/year and the absolute age of the tree was 106 years. Assuming that mice were infected with a single Sin Nombre virus genotype, phylogenetic analyses revealed that 10% (2/20) of viruses were reassortants, similar to the 14% (6/43) found in a previous report.ConclusionAge estimates from both segments suggest that Sin Nombre virus has evolved within the past 37–106 years. The rates of evolutionary changes reported here suggest that Sin Nombre virus M and S segment reassortment occurs frequently in nature.

Highlights

  • All viruses in the family Bunyaviridae possess a tripartite genome, consisting of a small, a medium, and a large RNA segment

  • It was soon shown that the deer mouse, Peromyscus maniculatus, is the reservoir host of this virus [2] and has since been shown that each hantavirus is associated with rodents or insectivores of single or a scant few species in long-term, perhaps co-evolutionary, relationships [3]

  • We sequenced portions of both the S and M segments of Sin Nombre virus (SNV) RNA samples collected from deer mice at six locations in Colorado, two locations in New Mexico and one location in Montana (Table 1 and Figure 1)

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Summary

Introduction

All viruses in the family Bunyaviridae possess a tripartite genome, consisting of a small, a medium, and a large RNA segment. When Sin Nombre virus (SNV; family Bunyaviridae, genus Hantavirus), the causative agent of the newly recognized hantavirus pulmonary syndrome in humans, was discovered in 1993 in New Mexico, Colorado, and Arizona, the step in understanding the links in the chain of transmission was to determine its natural history [1]. Subsequent investigations of genotypes of North American hantaviruses, principally of SNV, have indicated or suggested that, virus lineages occur in relative, if discontinuous geographic isolation and may yet be monophyletic, irrespective of geographic distribution. This has been attributed to rodent host genetics [3]. Viral phylogeographic differences may be correlated with deer mouse phylogeographic differences [4] and a variety of complex interactions may lead to genetic diversity of both the rodent hosts and the viruses [5]

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