Genomic Characterization and Molecular Epidemiology of Tusaviruses and Related Novel Protoparvoviruses (Family <i>Parvoviridae</i>) from Ruminant Species (Bovine, Ovine and Caprine) in Hungary
Tusavirus 1 of species <i>Protoparvovirus incertum 1</i> (family <i>Parvoviridae</i>) was first identified in humans and later in small ruminants (caprine and ovine). This study reports the full-length coding sequences (~4400–4600 nt) of three novel tusavirus-related protopar...
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| Main Authors: | , , , , , , |
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| Format: | Article |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
MDPI AG
2025-06-01
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| Series: | Viruses |
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | https://www.mdpi.com/1999-4915/17/7/888 |
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| Summary: | Tusavirus 1 of species <i>Protoparvovirus incertum 1</i> (family <i>Parvoviridae</i>) was first identified in humans and later in small ruminants (caprine and ovine). This study reports the full-length coding sequences (~4400–4600 nt) of three novel tusavirus-related protoparvoviruses from ovine (“misavirus”, PV540792), for the first time bovine (“sisavirus”, PV540793) and subsequently from caprine (“gisavirus” PV540850/51) fecal samples, using next-generation sequencing (NGS) and PCR techniques. Their NS1, VP1 and VP2 proteins shared 61–63% amino acid identities with each other and with tusaviruses, suggesting these three viruses belong to three novel species in the genus <i>Protoparvovirus</i>. Phylogenetic analyses placed them with tusaviruses on a separate main branch, implying a shared origin among these most likely ruminant protoparvoviruses. A small-scale epidemiological investigation on 318 ruminant enteric samples using novel generic NS1 primers found misavirus in 14/51 (27.5%) ovine and sisavirus in 19/203 (9.4%) bovine samples from multiple Hungarian farms. Tusavirus was present in 5/51 (9.8%) ovine and 15/62 (24.2%) caprine samples, all from one farm. The highest prevalences for all three viruses were found in animals aged 2–12 months, though sporadic cases were also found in other age groups. Partial NS and VP sequence-based phylogenetic trees showed virus-specific lineages for misa-, sisa-, gisa- and tusaviruses, with various strains forming sub-lineages. These findings suggest the presence of multiple genotypes and/or members of additional species, which was supported by a VP sequence-based hierarchical cluster analysis. The study’s viruses were mostly phylogenetically separated by host; however, two bovine sisavirus strains with diverse phylogenetic localizations in the NS (belonging to bovine sisaviruses) and VP1 trees (distantly related to ovine misaviruses) could indicate previous (interspecies?) recombination events. |
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| ISSN: | 1999-4915 |