CUYPERS, Laura N., Sophie GRYSEELS, Natalie VAN HOUTTE, Stuart J. E. BAIRD, Christopher A. SABUNI, Abdul S. KATAKWEBA, Sebastiaan R. M. VAN DEN BURG, Josef BRYJA, Herwig LEIRS a Joëlle Goüy DE BELLOCQ. Subspecific rodent taxa as the relevant host taxonomic level for mammarenavirus host specificity. Virology. Elsevier, 2023, roč. 581, April, s. 116-127. ISSN 0042-6822. Dostupné z: https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.virol.2023.02.014. |
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@article{2334063, author = {Cuypers, Laura N. and Gryseels, Sophie and Van Houtte, Natalie and Baird, Stuart J. E. and Sabuni, Christopher A. and Katakweba, Abdul S. and van den Burg, Sebastiaan R. M. and Bryja, Josef and Leirs, Herwig and de Bellocq, Joëlle Goüy}, article_number = {April}, doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.virol.2023.02.014}, keywords = {Host specificity; Host genetic structure; Comparative phylogeography; Songea virus; Berega virus; Ngerengere virus; Mus minutoides; Grammomys surdaster; Spill-over; Host jump}, language = {eng}, issn = {0042-6822}, journal = {Virology}, title = {Subspecific rodent taxa as the relevant host taxonomic level for mammarenavirus host specificity}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.virol.2023.02.014}, volume = {581}, year = {2023} }
TY - JOUR ID - 2334063 AU - Cuypers, Laura N. - Gryseels, Sophie - Van Houtte, Natalie - Baird, Stuart J. E. - Sabuni, Christopher A. - Katakweba, Abdul S. - van den Burg, Sebastiaan R. M. - Bryja, Josef - Leirs, Herwig - de Bellocq, Joëlle Goüy PY - 2023 TI - Subspecific rodent taxa as the relevant host taxonomic level for mammarenavirus host specificity JF - Virology VL - 581 IS - April SP - 116-127 EP - 116-127 PB - Elsevier SN - 00426822 KW - Host specificity KW - Host genetic structure KW - Comparative phylogeography KW - Songea virus KW - Berega virus KW - Ngerengere virus KW - Mus minutoides KW - Grammomys surdaster KW - Spill-over KW - Host jump UR - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.virol.2023.02.014 N2 - Mastomys natalensis-borne mammarenaviruses appear specific to subspecific M. natalensis taxa rather than to the whole species. Yet mammarenaviruses carried by M. natalensis are known to spill over and jump hosts in northern sub-Saharan Africa. Phylogeographic studies increasingly show that, like M. natalensis, small mammals in sub-Saharan Africa are often genetically structured into several subspecific taxa. Other mammarenaviruses may thus also form virus-subspecific host taxon associations. To investigate this, and if mammarenaviruses carried by M. natalensis in southern Africa are less prone to spill-over, we screened 1225 non -M. natalensis samples from Tanzania where many small mammal taxa meet. We found mammarenavirus RNA in 6 samples. Genetic/genomic characterisation confirmed they were not spill-over from M. natalensis. We detected host jumps among rodent tribe members and an association between mammarenaviruses and subspecific taxa of Mus minutoides and Grammomys surdaster, indicating host genetic structure may be crucial to understand virus distribution and host specificity. ER -
CUYPERS, Laura N., Sophie GRYSEELS, Natalie VAN HOUTTE, Stuart J. E. BAIRD, Christopher A. SABUNI, Abdul S. KATAKWEBA, Sebastiaan R. M. VAN DEN BURG, Josef BRYJA, Herwig LEIRS a Jo$\backslash$''elle Goüy DE BELLOCQ. Subspecific rodent taxa as the relevant host taxonomic level for mammarenavirus host specificity. \textit{Virology}. Elsevier, 2023, roč.~581, April, s.~116-127. ISSN~0042-6822. Dostupné z: https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.virol.2023.02.014.
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