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. 2020 Sep 17;9(38):e00621-20. doi: 10.1128/MRA.00621-20

Complete Coding Sequences of 23 South African Domestic and Wildlife Rabies Viruses

Claude Sabeta a,b,, Debrah Mohale a, Baby Phahladira a, Ernest Ngoepe a, Antoinette Van Schalkwyk a, Kgaogelo Mogano c, George Chirima c,d, Toru Suzuki e, Kohei Makita e
Editor: Kenneth M Stedmanf
PMCID: PMC7498424  PMID: 32943558

South African rabies viruses originating from dogs and jackals (canid viruses) are closely related and highlight cross-species transmission events between the two canine species. Rabies due to the canid lyssavirus variant is a significant public health matter in this country. The complete coding sequences of 23 canid lyssaviruses from South Africa are reported here.

ABSTRACT

South African rabies viruses originating from dogs and jackals (canid viruses) are closely related and highlight cross-species transmission events between the two canine species. Rabies due to the canid lyssavirus variant is a significant public health matter in this country. The complete coding sequences of 23 canid lyssaviruses from South Africa are reported here.

ANNOUNCEMENT

Rabies virus (RABV) is the prototype species of the Lyssavirus genus (family Rhabdoviridae, order Mononegavirales) (1) and causes encephalitis in all warm-blooded vertebrates. In South Africa, RABV infects both domestic and wild carnivore species (2). The domestic dog is the main vector species responsible for the transmission of rabies to humans (3), resulting in at least 59,000 human deaths annually, and the majority of these (≥95%) are recorded in Africa and Asia (2).

Specimens were collected by state veterinarians from animals in northern South Africa (Limpopo and Mpumalanga provinces) showing typical signs of central nervous system infection, preserved in glycerol-saline, and transported to the laboratory (see Table 1 for epidemiological information on the samples). The composite brain tissues were then subjected to a direct fluorescent antibody test for lyssavirus antigen (4). Total viral RNAs were extracted from the original lyssavirus-infected brain tissues and prepared for next-generation sequencing (NGS) using the HiSeq (Illumina, San Diego, CA, USA) platform. Briefly, the TRIzol-extracted viral RNA was depleted of host genomic DNA and rRNA using the on-column DNase treatment in the RNeasy Plus kit (Qiagen) and Terminator 5′-phosphate-dependent exonuclease (Epicentre Biotechnologies), as described previously (57). Double-stranded (ds) cDNA was synthesized from 50 ng RNA using a random cDNA synthesis system kit (Roche, Basel, Switzerland) according to the manufacturer’s instructions. The ds cDNA was purified using AMPure XP magnetic beads (Beckman Coulter, Brea, CA, USA), and 1 ng was used for the Nextera XT DNA sample preparation kit (Illumina). A sequencing library was prepared for each sample according to the manufacturer’s instructions and sequenced on an Illumina HiSeq with 2 × 125-bp paired-end reads following standard Illumina protocols, resulting in between 0.002 and 5.6 Gb data per isolate (Table 1). For each of the isolates, contigs were generated through both de novo assembling of all the reads and mapping of the same reads to existing rabies genomes (GenBank accession numbers KT336433 to KT336436) using default settings in CLC Genomics Workbench v.9 (Qiagen). A single consensus sequence was produced for each sample from an assembly of all the contigs previously generated. The newly obtained consensus sequence was used as a template to map all the original reads in order to estimate the average coverage and possible variants (see Table 1). The genetic organization of the full genomes of the South African RABVs was consistent with that of other previously characterized lyssaviruses (57). The sequence length and percent G+C content of each of the samples are listed in Table 1. Each sequence contains the complete coding regions of the nucleoprotein (N), glycoprotein (G), matrix protein (M), phosphoprotein (P), and the RNA-dependent polymerase (L) found in rabies viruses. Genetic analysis of these canid RABVs demonstrated that they are of the Africa 1-b lineage and have a high degree of sequence similarity (≥96.5%) (mean distance, 0.023; standard error [SE], 0.001), irrespective of their host species and locality of origin (1, 79).

TABLE 1.

Epidemiological information of the canine viruses sequenced in this study

Virus no. Lab ref no.a Yr of submission Species from which sample originated Size of raw data (GB) No. (%) of reads mapped to new consensus sequence Sequence length (bp) % G+C content BioProject accession no. GenBank accession no.
1 125/15 2015 Canis familiaris 2.62 159,506 (0.76) 11,923 45.4 SRR12012256 MT454631
2 155/15 2015 Proteles cristatus 2.30 7,365 (0.04) 11,902 45.5 SRR12012255 MT454632
3 361/15 2015 Proteles cristatus 2.73 4,365 (0.02) 11,908 45.6 SRR12012244 MT454633
4 471/15 2015 Canis familiaris 2.65 72,025 (0.34) 11,923 45.4 SRR12012240 MT454634
5 682/15 2015 Canis familiaris 5.63 31,529 (0.07) 11,923 45.3 SRR12012239 MT454635
6 516/16 2016 Canis familiaris 1.73 217,555 (1.57) 11,923 45.3 SRR12012238 MT454636
7 583/16 2016 Canis familiaris 2.53 309,360 (1.53) 11,923 45.4 SRR12012237 MT454637
8 631/16 2016 Otocyon megalotis 4.16 6,656 (0.02) 11,923 45.4 SRR12012236 MT454638
9 635/16 2016 Canis familiaris 1.39 166,479 (1.5) 11,923 45.3 SRR12012235 MT454639
10 676/16 2016 Otocyon megalotis 3.53 5,640 (0.02) 11,923 45.4 SRR12012234 MT454640
11 690/16 2016 Canis familiaris 0.002 37.321 (0.22) 11,923 45.3 SRR12012254 MT454641
12 725/16 2016 Proteles cristatus 2.90 6,971 (0.03) 11,923 45.5 SRR12012253 MT454642
13 269/17 2017 Canis familiaris 4.40 218,019 (0.62) 11,922 45.6 SRR12012252 MT454643
14 400/17 2017 Canis familiaris 1.94 37,211 (0.24) 11,922 45.6 SRR12012251 MT454645
15 454/17 2017 Canis mesomelas 2.80 123,359 (0.55) 11,922 45.6 SRR12012250 MT454646
16 460/17 2017 Canis mesomelas 2.95 21,259 (0.09) 11,922 45.6 SRR12012249 MT454647
17 466/17 2017 Canis mesomelas 4.43 10,620 (0.03) 11,923 45.3 SRR12012248 MT454648
18 474/17 2017 Canis mesomelas 1.58 26,616 (0.21) 11,922 45.6 SRR12012247 MT454649
19 477/17 2017 Otocyon megalotis 2.14 92,643 (0.54) 11,922 45.6 SRR12012246 MT454650
20 480/17 2017 Canis mesomelas 2.90 53,270 (0.23) 11,922 45.6 SRR12012245 MT454651
21 483/17 2017 Canis mesomelas 2.40 7,664 (0.04) 11,923 45.3 SRR12012243 MT454652
22 502/17 2017 Canis mesomelas 2.26 81,394 (0.45) 11,923 45.3 SRR12012242 MT454653
23 503/17 2017 Canis mesomelas 2.21 70,808 (0.4) 11,923 45.3 SRR12012241 MT454654
a

Sample submitted to Agricultural Research Council—Onderstepoort Veterinary Institute (ARC-OVI) for laboratory confirmation of RABV.

Data availability.

The complete coding sequences were submitted to GenBank and are available under accession numbers MT454631 through MT454654 (Table 1) and BioProject accession number PRJNA638742.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This study was partly supported with funding from the National Research Foundation (NRF) of South Africa (NRF unique grant number 114679, ARC grant number P10000130) and the EU Framework Horizon 2020 Innovation Grant, European Virus Archive (EVAg, grant number 653316).

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Associated Data

This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.

Data Availability Statement

The complete coding sequences were submitted to GenBank and are available under accession numbers MT454631 through MT454654 (Table 1) and BioProject accession number PRJNA638742.


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