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Title: | The discovery, distribution, and diversity of DNA viruses associated with Drosophila melanogaster in Europe |
Author: | Wallace, Megan A. Coffman, Kelsey A. Gilbert, Clément Ravindran, Sanjana Albery, Gregory F. Abbott, Jessica Argyridou, Eliza Bellosta, Paola Betancourt, Andrea J. Colinet, Hervé Eric, Katarina Glaser-Schmitt, Amanda Grath, Sonja Jelic, Mihailo Kankare, Maaria Kozeretska, Iryna Loeschcke, Volker Montchamp-Moreau, Catherine Ometto, Lino Onder, Banu Sebnem Orengo Ferriz, Dorcas J. Parsch, John Pascual Berniola, Marta Patenkovic, Aleksandra Puerma Rodríguez, Eva María Ritchie, Michael G. Rota-Stabelli, Omar Schou, Mads Fristrup Serga, Svitlana V. Stamenkovic-Radak, Marina Tanaskovic, Marija Savic Veselinovic, Marija Vieira, Jorge Vieira, Cristina P. Kapun, Martin Flatt, Thomas González, Josefa Staubach, Fabian Obbard, Darren J. |
Keywords: | Virus ADN Drosòfila DNA viruses Drosophila |
Issue Date: | 1-Apr-2021 |
Publisher: | Oxford University Press |
Abstract: | Drosophila melanogaster is an important model for antiviral immunity in arthropods, but very few DNA viruses have been described from the family Drosophilidae. This has limited our opportunity to use natural host-pathogen combinations in experimental studies, and may have biased our understanding of the Drosophila virome. Here we report fourteen DNA viruses detectable by metagenomic analysis of six and a half thousand pool-sequenced Drosophila, sampled from 47 European locations between 2014 and 2016. These include three new Nudiviruses, a new and divergent Entomopox virus, a virus related to Leptopilina boulardi filamentous virus, and a virus related to Musca domestica salivary gland hypertrophy virus. We also find an endogenous genomic copy of Galbut virus, a dsRNA Partitivirus, segregating at very low frequency. Remarkably, we show that Drosophila Vesanto virus, a small DNA virus previously described as a Bidnavirus, may be composed of up to 12 segments and represent a new lineage of segmented DNA viruses. Only two of the DNA viruses, Drosophila Kallithea nudivirus and Drosophila Vesanto virus are relatively common, being found in 2% or more of wild flies. The other viruses are rare, with many likely to be represented by a single infected fly. We find that virus prevalence in Europe reflects the prevalence seen in publicly-available datasets, with Drosophila Kallithea nudivirus and Drosophila Vesanto virus only being commonly detectable in public data from wild-caught flies and large population cages, and the other viruses being rare or absent. These analyses suggest that DNA viruses are generally at lower prevalence than RNA viruses in D. melanogaster, and may be less likely to persist in laboratory cultures. Our findings go some way to redress an earlier bias toward RNA virus studies in Drosophila, and lay the foundation needed to harness the power of Drosophila as a model system for the study of DNA viruses. |
Note: | Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1093/ve/veab031 |
It is part of: | Virus Evolution, 2021, vol. 7, num. 1, p. 1-23 |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/2445/197754 |
Related resource: | https://doi.org/10.1093/ve/veab031 |
ISSN: | 2057-1577 |
Appears in Collections: | Articles publicats en revistes (Genètica, Microbiologia i Estadística) |
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