2020
DOI: 10.1128/jvi.00001-20
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Identification of Reptarenaviruses, Hartmaniviruses, and a Novel Chuvirus in Captive Native Brazilian Boa Constrictors with Boid Inclusion Body Disease

Abstract: Boid inclusion body disease (BIBD) is a transmissible viral disease of captive snakes that causes severe losses in snake collections worldwide. It is caused by reptarenavirus infection, which can persist over several years without overt signs but is generally associated with the eventual death of the affected snakes. Thus far, reports have confirmed the existence of reptarenaviruses in captive snakes in North America, Europe, Asia, and Australia, but there is no evidence that it also occurs in wild snakes. BIB… Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(29 citation statements)
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“…This Hardyhead chuvirus displayed three open reading frames, representing the L protein (RdRp), glycoprotein and nucleoprotein. Our analysis identified Guangdong red-banded snake chuvirus ( Shi et al 2018 ) as the closest relative of the L protein (44% amino acid similarity), Wenling fish chu-like virus ( Shi et al 2018 ) as the closest relative of the glycoprotein (41%) and Herr Frank virus 1 ( Argenta et al 2020 ) as the closest relative of the nucleoprotein (34%). Hardyhead chuvirus formed a distinct phylogenetic clade with all other vertebrate-associated chuviruses ( Fig.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…This Hardyhead chuvirus displayed three open reading frames, representing the L protein (RdRp), glycoprotein and nucleoprotein. Our analysis identified Guangdong red-banded snake chuvirus ( Shi et al 2018 ) as the closest relative of the L protein (44% amino acid similarity), Wenling fish chu-like virus ( Shi et al 2018 ) as the closest relative of the glycoprotein (41%) and Herr Frank virus 1 ( Argenta et al 2020 ) as the closest relative of the nucleoprotein (34%). Hardyhead chuvirus formed a distinct phylogenetic clade with all other vertebrate-associated chuviruses ( Fig.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The phylogenetic range of the Chuviridae largely incorporates invertebrate hosts with diverse genomes (segmented, unsegmented and circular) ( Jun-Hua et al 2015 ). Recently, chuviruses have been discovered in vertebrates, all possessing three segments ( Shi et al 2018 ; Argenta et al 2020 ). The novel chuvirus detected here in the unspecked hardyhead displayed these genomic features with the L gene (RdRp), S gene (glycoprotein) and N gene (nucleoprotein) all related to fish and reptile viruses ( Fig.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To normalize the SwSCV-1 RNA levels against a house-keeping gene, we ordered the following primers and probe for the detection of Boa constrictor glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH): forward primer: 5' CTGGTATGACAACGAATA 3', reverse primer: 5' CAGTCTTTACTCCTTAGATG 3', and probe 5' 6-Fam (carboxyfluorescein)-TGAACCAACAAGTCTACCACACG-BHQ-1 3'. Reference assembly using Python bivitattus GAPDH (GenBank accession: XM_007429612.3) as the template in Unipro UGENE (http: //ugene.net/; accessed on 11 July 2019) [39] served to obtain the mRNA for B. constrictor GAPDH from the reads of our earlier metatranscriptomic studies [35,[40][41][42].…”
Section: Quantitative Reverse Transcription Pcr (Qrt-pcr)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Virus-like contig 145 (signal crayfish-associated chu-like virus 4, 1009 bp) had a 30% amino acid sequence identity to RdRp. The Beihai hermit crab virus 3 belongs to the Mivirus genus from the recently discovered negative-strand RNA Chuviridae family, characterized by HTS analysis only [3,31,58]. Diverse chuvirus-derived endogenous viral elements were also detected in mosquito genomes [59].…”
Section: Phylogenetic Relationships and Genome Organization Of Selected Newly Identified Viral Sequencesmentioning
confidence: 99%