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Article Abstract

The family Bunyaviridae has more than 530 members that are distributed among five genera or remain to be classified. The genus Orthobunyavirus is the most diverse bunyaviral genus with more than 220 viruses that have been assigned to more than 18 serogroups based on serological cross-reactions and limited molecular-biological characterization. Sequence information for all three orthobunyaviral genome segments is only available for viruses belonging to the Bunyamwera, Bwamba/Pongola, California encephalitis, Gamboa, Group C, Mapputta, Nyando, and Simbu serogroups. Here we present coding-complete sequences for all three genome segments of 15 orthobunyaviruses belonging to the Anopheles A, Capim, Guamá, Kongool, Tete, and Turlock serogroups, and of two unclassified bunyaviruses previously not known to be orthobunyaviruses (Tataguine and Witwatersrand viruses). Using those sequence data, we established the most comprehensive phylogeny of the Orthobunyavirus genus to date, now covering 15 serogroups. Our results emphasize the high genetic diversity of orthobunyaviruses and reveal that the presence of the small nonstructural protein (NSs)-encoding open reading frame is not as common in orthobunyavirus genomes as previously thought.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4664991PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v7112918DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • The Bunyaviridae family has over 530 members across five genera, with the Orthobunyavirus genus being the most diverse, containing more than 220 viruses across 18 serogroups based on serological reactions and molecular characterization.
  • This study provides complete genomic sequences for 15 orthobunyaviruses from various serogroups, along with two previously unclassified viruses (Tataguine and Witwatersrand).
  • The research establishes a comprehensive phylogeny for Orthobunyaviruses and highlights their high genetic diversity, while also suggesting that the small nonstructural protein (NSs)-encoding open reading frame is less common than previously assumed.
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