Canine distemper virus in the Serengeti ecosystem: molecular adaptation to different carnivore species

2017 | review. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

Jump to: Cite & Linked | Documents & Media | Details | Version history

Cite this publication

​Canine distemper virus in the Serengeti ecosystem: molecular adaptation to different carnivore species​
Nikolin, V. M.; Olarte-Castillo, X. A.; Osterrieder, N.; Hofer, H.; Dubovi, E.; Mazzoni, C. J.& Brunner, E. et al.​ (2017)
Molecular Ecology, 26​(7) pp. 2111​-2130​.​
Wiley. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/mec.13902 

Documents & Media

License

GRO License GRO License

Details

Authors
Nikolin, Veljko M.; Olarte-Castillo, Ximena A.; Osterrieder, Nikolaus; Hofer, Heribert; Dubovi, Edward; Mazzoni, Camila J.; Brunner, Edgar; Goller, Katja V.; Fyumagwa, Robert D.; Moehlman, Patricia D.; Thierer, Dagmar; East, Marion L.
Abstract
Was the 1993/1994 fatal canine distemper virus (CDV) epidemic in lions and spotted hyaenas in the Serengeti ecosystem caused by the recent spillover of a virulent domestic dog strain or one well adapted to these noncanids? We examine this question using sequence data from 13 Serengeti' strains including five complete genomes obtained between 1993 and 2011. Phylogenetic and haplotype network analyses reveal that strains from noncanids during the epidemic were more closely related to each other than to those from domestic or wild canids. All noncanid Serengeti' strains during the epidemic encoded: (1) one novel substitution G134S in the CDV-V protein; and (2) therare amino acid combination 519I/549H at two sites under positive selection in the region of the CDV-H protein that binds to SLAM (CD 150) host cell receptors. Worldwide, only a few noncanid strains in the America II lineage encode CDV-H 519I/549H. All canid Serengeti' strains during the epidemic coded CDV-V 134G, and CDV-H 519R/549Y, or 519R/549H. A functional assay of cell entry revealed the highest performance by CDV-H proteins encoding 519I/549H in cells expressing lion SLAM receptors, and the highest performance by proteins encoding 519R/549Y, typical of dog strains worldwide, in cells expressing dog SLAM receptors. Our findings are consistent with an epidemic in lions and hyaenas caused by CDV variants better adapted to noncanids than canids, but not with the recent spillover of a dog strain. Our study reveals a greater complexity of CDV molecular epidemiology in multihost environments than previously thought.
Issue Date
2017
Status
published
Publisher
Wiley
Journal
Molecular Ecology 
ISSN
1365-294X; 0962-1083

Reference

Citations


Social Media