Association of SNPs in Microtus arvalis and clade infections by TULV-CEN.S and TULV-EST.S ...

The natural host ranges of many viruses are restricted to very specific taxa. Little is known about the molecular barriers between species that lead to the establishment of this restriction or generally prevent virus emergence in new hosts. Here, we identify genomic polymorphisms in a natural rodent...

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Main Authors: Labutin, Anton, Saxenhofer, Moritz, White, Thomas, Heckel, Gerald
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: Dryad 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.5dv41ns6p
https://datadryad.org/stash/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.5dv41ns6p
id ftdatacite:10.5061/dryad.5dv41ns6p
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdatacite:10.5061/dryad.5dv41ns6p 2024-02-04T09:59:42+01:00 Association of SNPs in Microtus arvalis and clade infections by TULV-CEN.S and TULV-EST.S ... Labutin, Anton Saxenhofer, Moritz White, Thomas Heckel, Gerald 2021 https://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.5dv41ns6p https://datadryad.org/stash/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.5dv41ns6p en eng Dryad Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode cc0-1.0 FOS Biological sciences Host-pathogen co-evolution Genome-wide association study Microtus arvalis Tula orthohantavirus genomic admixture Dataset dataset 2021 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.5dv41ns6p 2024-01-05T01:14:15Z The natural host ranges of many viruses are restricted to very specific taxa. Little is known about the molecular barriers between species that lead to the establishment of this restriction or generally prevent virus emergence in new hosts. Here, we identify genomic polymorphisms in a natural rodent host associated with a strong genetic barrier to the transmission of the European Tula orthohantavirus (TULV). We analyzed the very abrupt spatial transition between two major phylogenetic clades in TULV across the comparatively much wider natural hybrid zone between evolutionary lineages of their reservoir host, the common vole (Microtus arvalis). A genomic scan of 79 225 Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs) in 323 TULV infected host individuals detected 30 SNPs that were associated with specific TULV clades in two replicate sampling transects. Focusing the analysis on 199 voles with evidence of genomic admixture at the individual level (0.1 - 0.9) supported statistical significance for all 30 loci. Host ... : Host genotyping : Genotyping by Sequencing (GBS) (Elshire et al., 2011) was carried out for all TULV infected common voles and additional samples from locations where no TULV infection was detected on the Illumina NextSeq platform at Cornell University. Restriction enzymes PstI and MspI were used to generate the libraries in 96-well plates. SNPs were identified and individuals genotyped simultaneously using the GBS v2 pipeline (part of the Tassel 5 software) (Glaubitz et al., 2014), using a chromosome-level M. arvalis genome assembly as the reference sequence (Gouy et al., in prep). Default parameters were used, except that a minimum of five reads were required to identify a unique tag. Genome wide association study using GEMMA: The Genome-wide Efficient Mixed Model Association (GEMMA) analysis was conducted with the v.0.98.1 software (Zhou & Stephens, 2012). We ran GEMMA’s linear model on default parameters for the whole dataset of 323 infected individuals, as well as separately for the Bavaria transect ... Dataset Common vole Microtus arvalis DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Tula ENVELOPE(-65.650,-65.650,-65.517,-65.517)
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
topic FOS Biological sciences
Host-pathogen co-evolution
Genome-wide association study
Microtus arvalis
Tula orthohantavirus
genomic admixture
spellingShingle FOS Biological sciences
Host-pathogen co-evolution
Genome-wide association study
Microtus arvalis
Tula orthohantavirus
genomic admixture
Labutin, Anton
Saxenhofer, Moritz
White, Thomas
Heckel, Gerald
Association of SNPs in Microtus arvalis and clade infections by TULV-CEN.S and TULV-EST.S ...
topic_facet FOS Biological sciences
Host-pathogen co-evolution
Genome-wide association study
Microtus arvalis
Tula orthohantavirus
genomic admixture
description The natural host ranges of many viruses are restricted to very specific taxa. Little is known about the molecular barriers between species that lead to the establishment of this restriction or generally prevent virus emergence in new hosts. Here, we identify genomic polymorphisms in a natural rodent host associated with a strong genetic barrier to the transmission of the European Tula orthohantavirus (TULV). We analyzed the very abrupt spatial transition between two major phylogenetic clades in TULV across the comparatively much wider natural hybrid zone between evolutionary lineages of their reservoir host, the common vole (Microtus arvalis). A genomic scan of 79 225 Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs) in 323 TULV infected host individuals detected 30 SNPs that were associated with specific TULV clades in two replicate sampling transects. Focusing the analysis on 199 voles with evidence of genomic admixture at the individual level (0.1 - 0.9) supported statistical significance for all 30 loci. Host ... : Host genotyping : Genotyping by Sequencing (GBS) (Elshire et al., 2011) was carried out for all TULV infected common voles and additional samples from locations where no TULV infection was detected on the Illumina NextSeq platform at Cornell University. Restriction enzymes PstI and MspI were used to generate the libraries in 96-well plates. SNPs were identified and individuals genotyped simultaneously using the GBS v2 pipeline (part of the Tassel 5 software) (Glaubitz et al., 2014), using a chromosome-level M. arvalis genome assembly as the reference sequence (Gouy et al., in prep). Default parameters were used, except that a minimum of five reads were required to identify a unique tag. Genome wide association study using GEMMA: The Genome-wide Efficient Mixed Model Association (GEMMA) analysis was conducted with the v.0.98.1 software (Zhou & Stephens, 2012). We ran GEMMA’s linear model on default parameters for the whole dataset of 323 infected individuals, as well as separately for the Bavaria transect ...
format Dataset
author Labutin, Anton
Saxenhofer, Moritz
White, Thomas
Heckel, Gerald
author_facet Labutin, Anton
Saxenhofer, Moritz
White, Thomas
Heckel, Gerald
author_sort Labutin, Anton
title Association of SNPs in Microtus arvalis and clade infections by TULV-CEN.S and TULV-EST.S ...
title_short Association of SNPs in Microtus arvalis and clade infections by TULV-CEN.S and TULV-EST.S ...
title_full Association of SNPs in Microtus arvalis and clade infections by TULV-CEN.S and TULV-EST.S ...
title_fullStr Association of SNPs in Microtus arvalis and clade infections by TULV-CEN.S and TULV-EST.S ...
title_full_unstemmed Association of SNPs in Microtus arvalis and clade infections by TULV-CEN.S and TULV-EST.S ...
title_sort association of snps in microtus arvalis and clade infections by tulv-cen.s and tulv-est.s ...
publisher Dryad
publishDate 2021
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.5dv41ns6p
https://datadryad.org/stash/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.5dv41ns6p
long_lat ENVELOPE(-65.650,-65.650,-65.517,-65.517)
geographic Tula
geographic_facet Tula
genre Common vole
Microtus arvalis
genre_facet Common vole
Microtus arvalis
op_rights Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal
https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode
cc0-1.0
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.5dv41ns6p
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