Publications by authors named "Dean A Mckeown"

Article Synopsis
  • * In 2021, researchers analyzed RNA viromes from a significant number of honey bees and mites, uncovering 45 complete and 1702 partial viral genomes, leading to the identification of new viral entities.
  • * Common viruses identified included Sinaivirus and various strains of Iflavirus, with concerns that existing detection methods might misrepresent the presence of certain virus types in honey bee populations.
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Deformed wing virus (DWV) was first detected in dead honey bees in 1982 but has been in honey bees for at least 300 years. Due to its high prevalence and virulence, they have been linked with the ongoing decline in honey bee populations worldwide. A rapid, simple, semi-automated, high-throughput, and cost-effective method of screening colonies for viruses would benefit bee research and the beekeeping industry.

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Phaeoviruses () are large icosahedral viruses in the phylum Nucleocytoviricota with dsDNA genomes ranging from 160 to 560 kb, infecting multicellular brown algae (Phaeophyceae). The phaeoviral host range is broader than expected, not only infecting algae from the Ectocarpales but also from the Laminariales order. However, despite phaeoviral infections being reported globally, Norwegian kelp species have not been screened.

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Two sister orders of the brown macroalgae (class Phaeophyceae), the morphologically complex Laminariales (commonly referred to as kelp) and the morphologically simple Ectocarpales are natural hosts for the dsDNA phaeoviruses (family ) that persist as proviruses in the genomes of their hosts. We have previously shown that the major capsid protein (MCP) and DNA polymerase concatenated gene phylogeny splits phaeoviruses into two subgroups, A and B (both infecting Ectocarpales), while MCP-based phylogeny suggests that the kelp phaeoviruses form a distinct third subgroup C. Here we used MCP to better understand the host range of phaeoviruses by screening a further 96 and 909 samples representing 11 and 3 species of kelp and Ectocarpales, respectively.

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Article Synopsis
  • Phaeoviruses are latent viruses that insert their DNA into brown algae, previously only found in small macroalgae, but a new cluster infecting kelps has been identified.
  • The Laminaria digitata Virus (LdigV) was studied, showing that it replicates in the host's nucleus and affects the chloroplast while assembling in the cytoplasm of kelp cells.
  • This discovery marks the first identification of phaeoviruses in kelp, with significant infection rates observed in populations, though the overall impact on these seaweeds is still unclear.
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