Phylogenetic and recombination analyses of two deformed wing virus strains from different honeybee species in China

Background Deformed wing virus (DWV) is one of many viruses that infect honeybees and has been extensively studied because of its close association with honeybee colony collapse that is induced by Varroa destructor. However, virus genotypes, sequence characteristics, and genetic variations of DWV re...

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Main Authors: Dongliang Fei, Yaxi Guo, Qiong Fan, Haoqi Wang, Jiadi Wu, Ming Li, Mingxiao Ma
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2019-06-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
DWV
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/7214.pdf
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spelling doaj-471c106fff61409db686a4d20717cfed2020-11-25T01:51:03ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592019-06-017e721410.7717/peerj.7214Phylogenetic and recombination analyses of two deformed wing virus strains from different honeybee species in ChinaDongliang Fei0Yaxi Guo1Qiong Fan2Haoqi Wang3Jiadi Wu4Ming Li5Mingxiao Ma6Institute of Biological Sciences, Jinzhou Medical University, Jinzhou, Liaoning, ChinaInstitute of Biological Sciences, Jinzhou Medical University, Jinzhou, Liaoning, ChinaJinzhou Animal Disease Prevention and Control Center, Jinzhou, Liaoning, ChinaInstitute of Biological Sciences, Jinzhou Medical University, Jinzhou, Liaoning, ChinaInstitute of Biological Sciences, Jinzhou Medical University, Jinzhou, Liaoning, ChinaInstitute of Biological Sciences, Jinzhou Medical University, Jinzhou, Liaoning, ChinaInstitute of Biological Sciences, Jinzhou Medical University, Jinzhou, Liaoning, ChinaBackground Deformed wing virus (DWV) is one of many viruses that infect honeybees and has been extensively studied because of its close association with honeybee colony collapse that is induced by Varroa destructor. However, virus genotypes, sequence characteristics, and genetic variations of DWV remain unknown in China. Methods Two DWV strains were isolated from Jinzhou and Qinhuangdao cities in China, and were named China1-2017 (accession number: MF770715) and China2-2018 (accession number: MH165180), respectively, and their complete genome sequences were analyzed. To investigate the phylogenetic relationships of the DWV isolates, a phylogenetic tree of the complete open reading frame (ORF), structural protein VP1, and non-structural protein 3C+RdRp of the DWV sequences was constructed using the MEGA 5.0 software program. Then, the similarity and recombinant events of the DWV isolated strains were analyzed using recombination detection program (RDP4) software and genetic algorithm for recombination detection (GARD). Results The complete genomic analysis showed that the genomes of the China1-2017 and China2-2018 DWV strains consisted of 10,141 base pairs (bp) and 10,105 bp, respectively, and contained a single, large ORF (China1-2017: 1,146–9,827 bp; China2-2018: 1,351–9,816 bp) that encoded 2,894 amino acids. The sequences were compared with 20 previously reported DWV sequences from different countries and with sequences of two closely related viruses, Kakugo virus (KV) and V. destructor virus-1. Multiple sequence comparisons revealed a nucleotide identity of 84.3–96.7%, and identity of 94.7–98.6% in amino acids between the two isolate strains and 20 reference strains. The two novel isolates showed 96.7% nucleotide identity and 98.1% amino acid identity. The phylogenetic analyses showed that the two isolates belonged to DWV Type A and were closely related to the KV-2001 strain from Japan. Based on the RDP4 and GARD analyses, the recombination of the China2-2018 strain was located at the 4,266–7,507 nt region, with Korea I-2012 as an infer unknown parent and China-2017 as a minor parent, which spanned the entire helicase ORF. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to the complete sequence of DWV isolated from Apis cerana and the possible DWV recombination events in China. Our findings are important for further research of the phylogenetic relationship of DWVs in China with DWV strains from other countries and also contribute to the understanding of virological properties of these complex DWV recombinants.https://peerj.com/articles/7214.pdfDWVIsolationPhylogenetic analysisRecombinationChina
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dongliang Fei
Yaxi Guo
Qiong Fan
Haoqi Wang
Jiadi Wu
Ming Li
Mingxiao Ma
spellingShingle Dongliang Fei
Yaxi Guo
Qiong Fan
Haoqi Wang
Jiadi Wu
Ming Li
Mingxiao Ma
Phylogenetic and recombination analyses of two deformed wing virus strains from different honeybee species in China
PeerJ
DWV
Isolation
Phylogenetic analysis
Recombination
China
author_facet Dongliang Fei
Yaxi Guo
Qiong Fan
Haoqi Wang
Jiadi Wu
Ming Li
Mingxiao Ma
author_sort Dongliang Fei
title Phylogenetic and recombination analyses of two deformed wing virus strains from different honeybee species in China
title_short Phylogenetic and recombination analyses of two deformed wing virus strains from different honeybee species in China
title_full Phylogenetic and recombination analyses of two deformed wing virus strains from different honeybee species in China
title_fullStr Phylogenetic and recombination analyses of two deformed wing virus strains from different honeybee species in China
title_full_unstemmed Phylogenetic and recombination analyses of two deformed wing virus strains from different honeybee species in China
title_sort phylogenetic and recombination analyses of two deformed wing virus strains from different honeybee species in china
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Background Deformed wing virus (DWV) is one of many viruses that infect honeybees and has been extensively studied because of its close association with honeybee colony collapse that is induced by Varroa destructor. However, virus genotypes, sequence characteristics, and genetic variations of DWV remain unknown in China. Methods Two DWV strains were isolated from Jinzhou and Qinhuangdao cities in China, and were named China1-2017 (accession number: MF770715) and China2-2018 (accession number: MH165180), respectively, and their complete genome sequences were analyzed. To investigate the phylogenetic relationships of the DWV isolates, a phylogenetic tree of the complete open reading frame (ORF), structural protein VP1, and non-structural protein 3C+RdRp of the DWV sequences was constructed using the MEGA 5.0 software program. Then, the similarity and recombinant events of the DWV isolated strains were analyzed using recombination detection program (RDP4) software and genetic algorithm for recombination detection (GARD). Results The complete genomic analysis showed that the genomes of the China1-2017 and China2-2018 DWV strains consisted of 10,141 base pairs (bp) and 10,105 bp, respectively, and contained a single, large ORF (China1-2017: 1,146–9,827 bp; China2-2018: 1,351–9,816 bp) that encoded 2,894 amino acids. The sequences were compared with 20 previously reported DWV sequences from different countries and with sequences of two closely related viruses, Kakugo virus (KV) and V. destructor virus-1. Multiple sequence comparisons revealed a nucleotide identity of 84.3–96.7%, and identity of 94.7–98.6% in amino acids between the two isolate strains and 20 reference strains. The two novel isolates showed 96.7% nucleotide identity and 98.1% amino acid identity. The phylogenetic analyses showed that the two isolates belonged to DWV Type A and were closely related to the KV-2001 strain from Japan. Based on the RDP4 and GARD analyses, the recombination of the China2-2018 strain was located at the 4,266–7,507 nt region, with Korea I-2012 as an infer unknown parent and China-2017 as a minor parent, which spanned the entire helicase ORF. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to the complete sequence of DWV isolated from Apis cerana and the possible DWV recombination events in China. Our findings are important for further research of the phylogenetic relationship of DWVs in China with DWV strains from other countries and also contribute to the understanding of virological properties of these complex DWV recombinants.
topic DWV
Isolation
Phylogenetic analysis
Recombination
China
url https://peerj.com/articles/7214.pdf
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