Rediscovering “Baculovirus-A” (Johnson, 1976): The complete genome of ‘Callinectes sapidus nudivirus’

[Display omitted] •We provide the complete genome, histopathology, and ultrastructure for a virus from Callinectes sapidus.•This virus was originally described by Johnson (1976) and was one of the first identified crustacean viruses.•The virus is a member of the Nudiviridae and is provisionally term...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of invertebrate pathology 2022-10, Vol.194, p.107822-107822, Article 107822
Hauptverfasser: Bojko, Jamie, Walters, Erin, Burgess, Amy, Behringer, Donald C.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •We provide the complete genome, histopathology, and ultrastructure for a virus from Callinectes sapidus.•This virus was originally described by Johnson (1976) and was one of the first identified crustacean viruses.•The virus is a member of the Nudiviridae and is provisionally termed ‘Callinectes sapidus nudivirus’ Callinectes sapidus, or the ‘blue crab’, supports an extensive east-coast USA fishery and was one of the first crustacean species in which viruses were observed. Pioneering research by Dr Phyllis Johnson led to these initial discoveries, one of which included the discovery of a virus termed “Baculovirus-A”. This virus was considered a potential member of the Baculoviridae, Nimaviridae, or Nudiviridae, in which all viral members are rod-shaped dsDNA viruses found in the nucleus of their host cell. With the availability of genomic and bioinformatic tools, such as Illumina HiSeq and assembly programs, it is now possible to assemble the genomes of viruses and gain additional genomic insight, which can shed light on viral taxonomy. Using these tools, alongside electron micrographs and histology slides, we reveal that the hepatopancreas-infecting ‘Baculovirus-A’ from Callinectes sapidus is a member of the Nudiviridae, resembling genetic and protein similarity to other crab and lobster infecting nudiviruses from the Gammanudivirus genus. Histologically, the virus causes nuclear hypertrophy as observed for other gammanuriviruses. The genome of the virus is circular, 122,436 bp in length, and encodes a predicted 98 protein coding genes, including all of the nudivirus core genes. The prevalence of virus from across Florida, USA, is provided alongside a genomic comparison of the new viral genome against other Gammanudivirus species, revealing the average prevalence to be 2.2% and that Callinectes sapidus nudivirus is distantly similar to the recently described Carcinus maenas nudivirus from Canada.
ISSN:0022-2011
1096-0805
DOI:10.1016/j.jip.2022.107822