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A comparative genomic and evolutionary analysis of circulating strains of Avian avulavirus 1 in Pakistan

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A comparative genomic and evolutionary analysis of circulating strains of Avian avulavirus 1 in Pakistan. / Rahman, Aziz-ul; Munir, Muhammad; Shabbir, Muhammad Zubair.
In: Molecular Genetics and Genomics, Vol. 294, No. 5, 30.10.2019, p. 1289–1309.

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Rahman A, Munir M, Shabbir MZ. A comparative genomic and evolutionary analysis of circulating strains of Avian avulavirus 1 in Pakistan. Molecular Genetics and Genomics. 2019 Oct 30;294(5):1289–1309. Epub 2019 May 30. doi: 10.1007/s00438-019-01580-w

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Rahman, Aziz-ul ; Munir, Muhammad ; Shabbir, Muhammad Zubair. / A comparative genomic and evolutionary analysis of circulating strains of Avian avulavirus 1 in Pakistan. In: Molecular Genetics and Genomics. 2019 ; Vol. 294, No. 5. pp. 1289–1309.

Bibtex

@article{499d5a9b7cb74307857567c80a145d9f,
title = "A comparative genomic and evolutionary analysis of circulating strains of Avian avulavirus 1 in Pakistan",
abstract = "Newcastle disease, caused by Avian avulavirus 1 (AAvV 1), is endemic to many developing countries around the globe including Pakistan. Frequent epidemics are not uncommon even in vaccinated populations and are largely attributed to the genetic divergence of prevailing isolates and their transmission in the environment. With the strengthening of laboratory capabilities in Pakistan, a number of genetically diverse AAvV 1 strains have recently been isolated and individually characterized in comparison with isolates reported elsewhere in the world. However, there lacks sufficient comparative genomic and phylogenomic analyses of field circulating strains that can elucidate the evolutionary dynamics over a period of time. Herein, we enriched the whole genome sequences of AAvV reported so far (n = 35) from Pakistan and performed comparative genomic, phylogenetic and evolutionary analyses. Based on these analyses, we found only isolates belonging to genotypes VI, VII and XIII of AAvV 1 in a wide range of avian and human hosts. Comparative phylogeny revealed the concurrent circulation of avulaviruses representing different sub-genotypes such as VIg, VIm, VIIa, VIIb, VIIe, VIIf, VIIi, XIIIb and XIIId. We found that the isolates of genotype VII were more closely associated with viruses of genotype XIII than genotype VI. An inter-genotype comparative residue analysis revealed a few substitutions in structurally and functionally important motifs. Putative recombination events were reported for only one of the captive-wild bird (pheasant)-origin isolates. The viruses of genotype VII had a high genetic diversity as compared to isolates from genotypes VI and XIII and, therefore, have more potential to evolve over a period of time. Taken together, the current study provides an insight into the genetic diversity and evolutionary dynamics of AAvV 1 strains circulating in Pakistan. Such findings are expected to facilitate better intervention strategies for the prevention and control of ND in disease-endemic countries across the globe particularly Pakistan.",
keywords = "Avian avulavirus 1, Genomic comparison, Phylogenomic analysis, Evolutionary dynamic, Genetic diversity, Genotypes and sub-genotypes",
author = "Aziz-ul Rahman and Muhammad Munir and Shabbir, {Muhammad Zubair}",
note = "The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00438-019-01580-w",
year = "2019",
month = oct,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1007/s00438-019-01580-w",
language = "English",
volume = "294",
pages = "1289–1309",
journal = "Molecular Genetics and Genomics",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A comparative genomic and evolutionary analysis of circulating strains of Avian avulavirus 1 in Pakistan

AU - Rahman, Aziz-ul

AU - Munir, Muhammad

AU - Shabbir, Muhammad Zubair

N1 - The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00438-019-01580-w

PY - 2019/10/30

Y1 - 2019/10/30

N2 - Newcastle disease, caused by Avian avulavirus 1 (AAvV 1), is endemic to many developing countries around the globe including Pakistan. Frequent epidemics are not uncommon even in vaccinated populations and are largely attributed to the genetic divergence of prevailing isolates and their transmission in the environment. With the strengthening of laboratory capabilities in Pakistan, a number of genetically diverse AAvV 1 strains have recently been isolated and individually characterized in comparison with isolates reported elsewhere in the world. However, there lacks sufficient comparative genomic and phylogenomic analyses of field circulating strains that can elucidate the evolutionary dynamics over a period of time. Herein, we enriched the whole genome sequences of AAvV reported so far (n = 35) from Pakistan and performed comparative genomic, phylogenetic and evolutionary analyses. Based on these analyses, we found only isolates belonging to genotypes VI, VII and XIII of AAvV 1 in a wide range of avian and human hosts. Comparative phylogeny revealed the concurrent circulation of avulaviruses representing different sub-genotypes such as VIg, VIm, VIIa, VIIb, VIIe, VIIf, VIIi, XIIIb and XIIId. We found that the isolates of genotype VII were more closely associated with viruses of genotype XIII than genotype VI. An inter-genotype comparative residue analysis revealed a few substitutions in structurally and functionally important motifs. Putative recombination events were reported for only one of the captive-wild bird (pheasant)-origin isolates. The viruses of genotype VII had a high genetic diversity as compared to isolates from genotypes VI and XIII and, therefore, have more potential to evolve over a period of time. Taken together, the current study provides an insight into the genetic diversity and evolutionary dynamics of AAvV 1 strains circulating in Pakistan. Such findings are expected to facilitate better intervention strategies for the prevention and control of ND in disease-endemic countries across the globe particularly Pakistan.

AB - Newcastle disease, caused by Avian avulavirus 1 (AAvV 1), is endemic to many developing countries around the globe including Pakistan. Frequent epidemics are not uncommon even in vaccinated populations and are largely attributed to the genetic divergence of prevailing isolates and their transmission in the environment. With the strengthening of laboratory capabilities in Pakistan, a number of genetically diverse AAvV 1 strains have recently been isolated and individually characterized in comparison with isolates reported elsewhere in the world. However, there lacks sufficient comparative genomic and phylogenomic analyses of field circulating strains that can elucidate the evolutionary dynamics over a period of time. Herein, we enriched the whole genome sequences of AAvV reported so far (n = 35) from Pakistan and performed comparative genomic, phylogenetic and evolutionary analyses. Based on these analyses, we found only isolates belonging to genotypes VI, VII and XIII of AAvV 1 in a wide range of avian and human hosts. Comparative phylogeny revealed the concurrent circulation of avulaviruses representing different sub-genotypes such as VIg, VIm, VIIa, VIIb, VIIe, VIIf, VIIi, XIIIb and XIIId. We found that the isolates of genotype VII were more closely associated with viruses of genotype XIII than genotype VI. An inter-genotype comparative residue analysis revealed a few substitutions in structurally and functionally important motifs. Putative recombination events were reported for only one of the captive-wild bird (pheasant)-origin isolates. The viruses of genotype VII had a high genetic diversity as compared to isolates from genotypes VI and XIII and, therefore, have more potential to evolve over a period of time. Taken together, the current study provides an insight into the genetic diversity and evolutionary dynamics of AAvV 1 strains circulating in Pakistan. Such findings are expected to facilitate better intervention strategies for the prevention and control of ND in disease-endemic countries across the globe particularly Pakistan.

KW - Avian avulavirus 1

KW - Genomic comparison

KW - Phylogenomic analysis

KW - Evolutionary dynamic

KW - Genetic diversity

KW - Genotypes and sub-genotypes

U2 - 10.1007/s00438-019-01580-w

DO - 10.1007/s00438-019-01580-w

M3 - Journal article

VL - 294

SP - 1289

EP - 1309

JO - Molecular Genetics and Genomics

JF - Molecular Genetics and Genomics

IS - 5

ER -