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Genetic diversity and phylodynamics of avian coronaviruses in Egyptian wild birds

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Genetic diversity and phylodynamics of avian coronaviruses in Egyptian wild birds. / Rohaim, M.A.; El Naggar, R.F.; Helal, A.M. et al.
In: Viruses, Vol. 11, No. 1, 57, 2019.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Rohaim, MA, El Naggar, RF, Helal, AM, Bayoumi, MM, El-Saied, MA, Ahmed, KA, Shabbir, MZ & Munir, M 2019, 'Genetic diversity and phylodynamics of avian coronaviruses in Egyptian wild birds', Viruses, vol. 11, no. 1, 57. https://doi.org/10.3390/v11010057

APA

Rohaim, M. A., El Naggar, R. F., Helal, A. M., Bayoumi, M. M., El-Saied, M. A., Ahmed, K. A., Shabbir, M. Z., & Munir, M. (2019). Genetic diversity and phylodynamics of avian coronaviruses in Egyptian wild birds. Viruses, 11(1), Article 57. https://doi.org/10.3390/v11010057

Vancouver

Rohaim MA, El Naggar RF, Helal AM, Bayoumi MM, El-Saied MA, Ahmed KA et al. Genetic diversity and phylodynamics of avian coronaviruses in Egyptian wild birds. Viruses. 2019;11(1):57. Epub 2019 Jan 14. doi: 10.3390/v11010057

Author

Bibtex

@article{4fcdc762fdfe4cbcbd50a77b93ab3c1e,
title = "Genetic diversity and phylodynamics of avian coronaviruses in Egyptian wild birds",
abstract = "Avian coronaviruses (ACoVs) are continuously evolving and causing serious economic consequences in the poultry industry and around the globe. Owing to their extensive genetic diversity and high mutation rates, controlling ACoVs has become a challenge. In this context, the potential contribution of wild birds in the disease dynamics, especially in domesticated birds, remains largely unknown. In the present study, five hundred fifty-seven (n = 557) cloacal/fecal swabs were collected from four different wild bird species from eight Egyptian governorates during 2016 and a total of fourteen positive isolates were used for phylodynamics and evolutionary analysis. Genetic relatedness based on spike (S1) gene demonstrated the clustering of majority of these isolates where nine isolates grouped within Egy/variant 2 (IS/885 genotype) and five isolates clustered within Egy/variant 1 (IS/1494/06 genotype). Interestingly, these isolates showed noticeable genetic diversity and were clustered distal to the previously characterized Egy/variant 1 and Egy/variant 2 in Egyptian commercial poultry. The S1 gene based comparison of nucleotide identity percentages revealed that all fourteen isolates reported in this study were genetically related to the variant GI-23 lineage with 92–100% identity. Taken together, our results demonstrate that ACoVs are circulating in Egyptian wild birds and highlight their possible contributions in the disease dynamics. The study also proposes that regular monitoring of the ACoVs in wild birds is required to effectively assess the role of wild birds in disease spread, and the emergence of ACoVs strains in the country. {\textcopyright} 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.",
keywords = "Avian coronavirus, Egypt, Monitoring, Phylodynamics, Wild bird",
author = "M.A. Rohaim and {El Naggar}, R.F. and A.M. Helal and M.M. Bayoumi and M.A. El-Saied and K.A. Ahmed and M.Z. Shabbir and M. Munir",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.3390/v11010057",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
journal = "Viruses",
issn = "1999-4915",
publisher = "MDPI AG",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Genetic diversity and phylodynamics of avian coronaviruses in Egyptian wild birds

AU - Rohaim, M.A.

AU - El Naggar, R.F.

AU - Helal, A.M.

AU - Bayoumi, M.M.

AU - El-Saied, M.A.

AU - Ahmed, K.A.

AU - Shabbir, M.Z.

AU - Munir, M.

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Avian coronaviruses (ACoVs) are continuously evolving and causing serious economic consequences in the poultry industry and around the globe. Owing to their extensive genetic diversity and high mutation rates, controlling ACoVs has become a challenge. In this context, the potential contribution of wild birds in the disease dynamics, especially in domesticated birds, remains largely unknown. In the present study, five hundred fifty-seven (n = 557) cloacal/fecal swabs were collected from four different wild bird species from eight Egyptian governorates during 2016 and a total of fourteen positive isolates were used for phylodynamics and evolutionary analysis. Genetic relatedness based on spike (S1) gene demonstrated the clustering of majority of these isolates where nine isolates grouped within Egy/variant 2 (IS/885 genotype) and five isolates clustered within Egy/variant 1 (IS/1494/06 genotype). Interestingly, these isolates showed noticeable genetic diversity and were clustered distal to the previously characterized Egy/variant 1 and Egy/variant 2 in Egyptian commercial poultry. The S1 gene based comparison of nucleotide identity percentages revealed that all fourteen isolates reported in this study were genetically related to the variant GI-23 lineage with 92–100% identity. Taken together, our results demonstrate that ACoVs are circulating in Egyptian wild birds and highlight their possible contributions in the disease dynamics. The study also proposes that regular monitoring of the ACoVs in wild birds is required to effectively assess the role of wild birds in disease spread, and the emergence of ACoVs strains in the country. © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

AB - Avian coronaviruses (ACoVs) are continuously evolving and causing serious economic consequences in the poultry industry and around the globe. Owing to their extensive genetic diversity and high mutation rates, controlling ACoVs has become a challenge. In this context, the potential contribution of wild birds in the disease dynamics, especially in domesticated birds, remains largely unknown. In the present study, five hundred fifty-seven (n = 557) cloacal/fecal swabs were collected from four different wild bird species from eight Egyptian governorates during 2016 and a total of fourteen positive isolates were used for phylodynamics and evolutionary analysis. Genetic relatedness based on spike (S1) gene demonstrated the clustering of majority of these isolates where nine isolates grouped within Egy/variant 2 (IS/885 genotype) and five isolates clustered within Egy/variant 1 (IS/1494/06 genotype). Interestingly, these isolates showed noticeable genetic diversity and were clustered distal to the previously characterized Egy/variant 1 and Egy/variant 2 in Egyptian commercial poultry. The S1 gene based comparison of nucleotide identity percentages revealed that all fourteen isolates reported in this study were genetically related to the variant GI-23 lineage with 92–100% identity. Taken together, our results demonstrate that ACoVs are circulating in Egyptian wild birds and highlight their possible contributions in the disease dynamics. The study also proposes that regular monitoring of the ACoVs in wild birds is required to effectively assess the role of wild birds in disease spread, and the emergence of ACoVs strains in the country. © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

KW - Avian coronavirus

KW - Egypt

KW - Monitoring

KW - Phylodynamics

KW - Wild bird

U2 - 10.3390/v11010057

DO - 10.3390/v11010057

M3 - Journal article

VL - 11

JO - Viruses

JF - Viruses

SN - 1999-4915

IS - 1

M1 - 57

ER -