Abstract

The high mutation rate of RNA viruses enables the generation of a genetically diverse viral population, termed a quasispecies, within a single infected host. This high in-host genetic diversity enables an RNA virus to adapt to a diverse array of selective pressures such as host immune response and switching between host species. The negative-sense, single-stranded RNA virus, viral haemorrhagic septicaemia virus (VHSV), was originally considered an epidemic virus of cultured rainbow trout in Europe, but was later proved to be endemic among a range of marine fish species in the Northern hemisphere. To better understand the nature of a virus quasispecies related to the evolutionary potential of VHSV, a deep-sequencing protocol specific to VHSV was established and applied to 4 VHSV isolates, 2 originating from rainbow trout and 2 from Atlantic herring. Each isolate was subjected to Illumina paired end shotgun sequencing after PCR amplification and the 11.1 kb genome was successfully sequenced with an average coverage of 0.5–1.9 × 106 sequenced copies. Differences in single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) frequency were detected both within and between isolates, possibly related to their stage of adaptation to host species and host immune reactions. The N, M, P and Nv genes appeared nearly fixed, while genetic variation in the G and L genes demonstrated presence of diverse genetic populations particularly in two isolates. The results demonstrate that deep sequencing and analysis methodologies can be useful for future in vivo host adaption studies of VHSV.

Highlights

  • Viral haemorrhagic septicaemia virus (VHSV) is an RNA virus endemic to marine and freshwater fish species

  • Virus isolates and viral propagation Deep sequencing of viral populations was conducted using four VHSV isolates (Table 1): two isolates originating from freshwater cultured rainbow trout (DK3592b, DK-9895174), and two isolates originating from Atlantic herring (4p168, 1p49)

  • Amplicon amplification Based on agarose gel electrophoresis, amplicons of expected size were synthesized by Reverse transcription (RT)-Polymerase chain reaction (PCR)

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Summary

Introduction

Viral haemorrhagic septicaemia virus (VHSV) is an RNA virus endemic to marine and freshwater fish species. It represents one of the most important viral pathogens in salmonid fish in continental Europe where it heavily affects cultured rainbow trout, causing a severe systemic disease with mortality rates as high as 90% [1] and resulting in extensive economical loses to the aquaculture industry [2, 3]. It has been revealed that rainbow trout adapted isolates have evolved from the marine environment and are the result of cross-species transmission followed by subsequent host adaptation [5, 9, 10].

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