Genetic characterization of frijoles and chilibre species complex viruses (genus phlebovirus; Family phenuiviridae) and three unclassified new world phleboviruses

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Abstract

The genus Phlebovirus is a diverse group of globally occurring viruses, including tick-, mosquito-, and sand fly-borne pathogens. Phleboviruses have historically been classified by serological methods. However, molecular methods alone have been used to identify emergent novel and related strains in recent years. This makes reconciling the classification of historically and newly characterized viruses challenging. To address this in part, we describe the characterization of the genomes of the Frijoles and Chilibre species complex phleboviruses, and three unclassified phleboviruses isolated in the Americas: Caimito, Itaporanga, and Rio Grande viruses that had previously only been described at the serological level. With the exception of Itaporanga virus, the phleboviruses sequenced in this study are phylogenetically related to the current species Frijoles phlebovirus, Bujaru phlebovirus, or the Chagres antigenic complex. Unexpectedly, molecular and phylogenetic analysis suggests Chilibre and Caimito viruses are taxonomically related to the family Peribunyaviridae. These viruses have a genomic architecture similar to peribunyaviruses and form monophyletic groups within the genus Pacuvirus. Our data highlight the importance of reconciling serological and molecular taxonomic classification. In addition, we suggest the taxonomy of Chilibre and Caimito viruses should be revised.

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Hughes, H. R., Russell, B. J., & Lambert, A. J. (2020). Genetic characterization of frijoles and chilibre species complex viruses (genus phlebovirus; Family phenuiviridae) and three unclassified new world phleboviruses. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 102(2), 359–365. https://doi.org/10.4269/ajtmh.19-0717

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