Abstract

We present the first complete genome sequence of Odocoileus hemionus deer adenovirus 1 (OdAdV-1). This virus can cause sporadic haemorrhagic disease in cervids, although epizootics with high mortality have occurred in California. OdAdV-1 has been placed in the genus Atadenovirus, based on partial hexon, pVIII and fibre genes. Ten field isolates recovered from naturally infected mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus), white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginiana) and moose (Alces alces) from Wyoming, black-tailed deer (Odocoileus hemionus columbianus) from California, and Rocky Mountain elk (Cervus elaphus nelsoni) from Colorado and Washington state were sequenced. The genome lengths ranged from 30 620 to 30 699 bp, contained the predicted proteins and gene organization typical of members of genus Atadenovirus, and had a high percentage of A/T nucleotides (66.7 %). Phylogenic analysis found that the closest ancestry was with ruminant atadenoviruses, while a divergence of the hexon, polymerase and penton base proteins of more than 15 % supports classification as a new species. Genetic global comparison between the 10 isolates found an overall 99 % identity, but greater divergence was found between those recovered from moose and elk as compared to deer, and a single variable region contained most of these differences. Our findings demonstrate that OdAdV-1 is highly conserved between 10 isolates recovered from multiple related cervid species, but genotypic differences, largely localized to a variable region, define two strains. We propose that the virus type name be changed to cervid adenovirus 1, with the species name Cervid atadenovirus A. Sequence data were used to develop molecular assays for improved detection and genotyping.

Highlights

  • Adenoviruses have worldwide distribution and infect vertebrates of all types

  • Present is a 1300 bp especially A/T-rich (72.6 %) noncoding region unique to the genus located between RH5 and E4.1 that has been described in ruminant atadenoviruses [16]

  • The complete genome sequence contains homologous genes and a gene arrangement that is typical of the genus Atadenovirus, which confirms the previous classification in this genus [22, 23]

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Summary

Introduction

Adenoviruses have worldwide distribution and infect vertebrates of all types. They are typically well adapted to specific host species and infection is frequently subclinical, except for in young or immunocompromised individuals [1]. Exceptions occur, such as turkey haemorrhagic disease and canine infectious hepatitis [2]. Exceptions occur for host-specific infections, as recently shown for a primate adenovirus (titi monkey adenovirus) with the potential to infect humans [3]. Numerous diverse genus members have been described from reptile hosts that lack the A/T bias [9,10,11,12].

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