Naturally occurring recombination in ferret coronaviruses revealed by complete genome characterization

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Abstract

Ferret coronaviruses (FRCoVs) exist as an enteric and a systemic pathotype, of which the latter is highly lethal to ferrets. To our knowledge, this study provides the first full genome sequence of a FRCoV, tentatively called FRCoV-NL-2010, which was detected in 2010 in ferrets in The Netherlands. Phylogenetic analysis showed that FRCoV-NL-2010 is most closely related to mink CoV, forming a separate clade of mustelid alphacoronavirus that split off early from other alphacoronaviruses. Based on sequence homology of the complete genome, we propose that these mustelid coronaviruses may be assigned to a new species. Comparison of FRCoV-NL- 2010 with the partially sequenced ferret systemic coronavirus MSU-1 and ferret enteric coronavirus MSU-2 revealed that recombination in the spike, 3c and envelope genes occurred between different FRCoVs.

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Lamers, M. M., Smits, S. L., Hundie, G. B., Provacia, L. B., Koopmans, M., Osterhaus, A. D. M. E., … Raj, V. S. (2016). Naturally occurring recombination in ferret coronaviruses revealed by complete genome characterization. Journal of General Virology, 97(9), 2180–2186. https://doi.org/10.1099/jgv.0.000520

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