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Distribution and characteristics of Beilong virus among wild rodents and shrews in China

Beilong virus (BeiV), a member of the newly recognized genus Jeilongvirus of family Paramyxoviridae, has been reported with limited geographic and host scopes, only in Hongkong, China and from two rat species. Here, by next-generation sequencing (NGS) on dominant wild small animal species in 4 provi...

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Published in:Infection, genetics and evolution genetics and evolution, 2020-11, Vol.85, p.104454-104454, Article 104454
Main Authors: Chen, Jin-Jin, Zhang, Xiao-Ai, Fan, Hang, Jiang, Fa-Chun, Jin, Mu-Zi, Dai, Ke, Wang, Ning, Zhang, Pan-He, Li, Xiao-Kun, Li, Hao, Shi, Wenqiang, Yang, Zhi-Cong, Fang, Li-Qun, Zhou, Hai-Sheng, Wei, Yue-Hong, Liu, Wei
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creator Chen, Jin-Jin
Zhang, Xiao-Ai
Fan, Hang
Jiang, Fa-Chun
Jin, Mu-Zi
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Wang, Ning
Zhang, Pan-He
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Li, Hao
Shi, Wenqiang
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Wei, Yue-Hong
Liu, Wei
description Beilong virus (BeiV), a member of the newly recognized genus Jeilongvirus of family Paramyxoviridae, has been reported with limited geographic and host scopes, only in Hongkong, China and from two rat species. Here, by next-generation sequencing (NGS) on dominant wild small animal species in 4 provinces in China, we obtained a complete sequence of BeiV strain from Rattus norvegicus in Guangdong, neighboring HongKong, China. We then made an expanded epidemiological investigation in 11 provinces to obtain the geographic distribution and genetic features of this virus. Altogether 7168 samples from 2005 animals (1903 rodents, 100 shrews, 2 mustelidaes) that belonged to 33 species of Cricetidae, Muridae, Sciuridae and Dipodidae family of Rodentia, 3 species of Soricidae family of Soricomorpha, 2 species of Mustelidae family of Carnivora were examined by RT-PCR and sequencing. A positive rate of 3.7% (266/7168) was obtained that was detected from 22 animal species, including 5 species of Cricetidae family, 12 species of Muridae family, 2 species of Sciuridae family and 3 species of Soricidae family. Phylogenetic analyses based on 154 partial Large gene sequences grouped the current BeiV into two lineages, that were related to their geographic regions and animal hosts. Our study showed the wide distribution of BeiV in common species of wild rodents and shrews in China, highlighting the necessity of epidemiological study in wider regions. •The largest sample size for the detection of BeiV.•A complete sequence of BeiV strain from Rattus. norvegicus in Guangdong.•The epidemiological distribution and genetic features of BeiV by Next-generation sequencing and RT-PCR.•BeiV of genetic diversity was correlated with its geographic origins and wild rodent hosts.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.meegid.2020.104454
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Phylogenetic analyses based on 154 partial Large gene sequences grouped the current BeiV into two lineages, that were related to their geographic regions and animal hosts. Our study showed the wide distribution of BeiV in common species of wild rodents and shrews in China, highlighting the necessity of epidemiological study in wider regions. •The largest sample size for the detection of BeiV.•A complete sequence of BeiV strain from Rattus. norvegicus in Guangdong.•The epidemiological distribution and genetic features of BeiV by Next-generation sequencing and RT-PCR.•BeiV of genetic diversity was correlated with its geographic origins and wild rodent hosts.</abstract><cop>Netherlands</cop><pub>Elsevier B.V</pub><pmid>32634600</pmid><doi>10.1016/j.meegid.2020.104454</doi><tpages>1</tpages><orcidid>https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7927-1684</orcidid><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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source ScienceDirect Freedom Collection
subjects Animals
Animals, Wild - virology
Beilong virus
China
China - epidemiology
Epidemiology
Genome, Viral
High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing
Jeilong virus
Mustelidae - virology
Paramyxoviridae - classification
Paramyxoviridae - genetics
Paramyxoviridae Infections - epidemiology
Paramyxoviridae Infections - veterinary
Paramyxoviridae Infections - virology
Phylogeny
Research Paper
Rodentia - virology
Shrews - virology
Small mammals
title Distribution and characteristics of Beilong virus among wild rodents and shrews in China
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