First detection and diversity of astroviruses in wild migratory birds of Sakhalin Island, North Pacific.

IF 1.9 4区 医学 Q3 GENETICS & HEREDITY Virus Genes Pub Date : 2024-12-27 DOI:10.1007/s11262-024-02130-2
Dmitry Zhirov, Nikita Dubovitskiy, Anastasiya Derko, Arina Loginova, Ivan Sobolev, Pavel Ktitorov, Olga Kulikova, Guimei He, Zhenghuan Wang, Wen Wang, Alexander Alekseev, Alexander Shestopalov, Kirill Sharshov
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Abstract

Researchers have identified Avastrovirus as a significant genus of bird viruses, linked to various avian diseases such as enteritis, growth retardation, nephritis and hepatitis. These infections can cause substantial economic losses in agrocultureand have a widespread impact on global food production. Although there have been numerous studies on these viruses, most of them-mainly focuses on poultry. Research on astroviruses in wild bird populations has revealed a wide genetic diversity of these viruses, yet our understanding of their biological and ecological characteristics remains limited. In this study, we for the first time detected avastrovirus in wild migratory birds of the families Anatidae and Columbidae from Sakhalin Island, North Pacific Ocean. Phylogenetic analysis revealed the presence of Avastrovirus 2 in wild doves and Avastrovirus 3 in wild ducks. These findings provide valuable insights into the circulation of astroviruses in wild bird populations of Sakhalin Island, which lies along the East Asian-Australasian Flyway.

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北太平洋库页岛野生候鸟中星状病毒的首次检测及其多样性。
研究人员已经确定Avastrovirus是一种重要的鸟类病毒属,与各种禽类疾病有关,如肠炎、生长迟缓、肾炎和肝炎。这些感染可造成农业重大经济损失,并对全球粮食生产产生广泛影响。尽管有很多关于这些病毒的研究,但大多数研究主要集中在家禽身上。对野生鸟类种群中的星状病毒的研究揭示了这些病毒的广泛遗传多样性,但我们对其生物学和生态学特征的了解仍然有限。本研究首次在北太平洋库页岛的雁科和苍鹭科野生候鸟中检测到avastrovirus。系统发育分析显示,野鸽和野鸭分别存在阿瓦斯特病毒2型和阿瓦斯特病毒3型。这些发现为了解星状病毒在库页岛野生鸟类种群中的传播提供了有价值的见解,库页岛位于东亚-澳大拉西亚飞行路线上。
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来源期刊
Virus Genes
Virus Genes 医学-病毒学
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
76
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Viruses are convenient models for the elucidation of life processes. The study of viruses is again on the cutting edge of biological sciences: systems biology, genomics, proteomics, metagenomics, using the newest most powerful tools. Huge amounts of new details on virus interactions with the cell, other pathogens and the hosts – animal (including human), insect, fungal, plant, bacterial, and archaeal - and their role in infection and disease are forthcoming in perplexing details requiring analysis and comments. Virus Genes is dedicated to the publication of studies on the structure and function of viruses and their genes, the molecular and systems interactions with the host and all applications derived thereof, providing a forum for the analysis of data and discussion of its implications, and the development of new hypotheses.
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