Despite a rapid expansion in the number of documented viruses following the advent of metagenomic sequencing, the identification and annotation of highly divergent RNA viruses remain challenging, particularly from poorly characterized hosts and environmental samples. Protein structures are more conserved than primary sequence data, such that structure-based comparisons provide an opportunity to reveal the viral 'dusk matter': viral sequences with low, but detectable, levels of sequence identity to known viruses with available protein structures. Here, we present a new open computational resource-RdRp-scan-that contains a standardized bioinformatic toolkit to identify and annotate divergent RNA viruses in metagenomic sequence data based on the detection of RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp) sequences. By combining RdRp-specific hidden Markov models (HMMs) and structural comparisons, we show that RdRp-scan can efficiently detect RdRp sequences with identity levels as low as 10 per cent to those from known viruses and not identifiable using standard sequence-to-sequence comparisons. In addition, to facilitate the annotation and placement of newly detected and divergent virus-like sequences into the diversity of RNA viruses, RdRp-scan provides new custom and curated databases of viral RdRp sequences and core motifs, as well as pre-built RdRp multiple sequence alignments. In parallel, our analysis of the sequence diversity detected by the RdRp-scan revealed that while most of the taxonomically unassigned RdRps fell into pre-established clusters, some fell into potentially new orders of RNA viruses related to the and . Finally, a survey of the conserved A, B, and C RdRp motifs within the RdRp-scan sequence database revealed additional variations of both sequence and position that might provide new insights into the structure, function, and evolution of viral polymerases.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ve/veac082 | DOI Listing |
J Med Internet Res
January 2025
Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, Department of Education and Psychology, Freie Universität Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
Background: Results on parental burden during the COVID-19 pandemic are predominantly available from nonrepresentative samples. Although sample selection can significantly influence results, the effects of sampling strategies have been largely underexplored.
Objective: This study aimed to investigate how sampling strategy may impact study results.
Elife
December 2024
Laboratory of Immunoregulation and Mucosal Immunology, VIB Center for Inflammation Research, Ghent, Belgium.
Since the precursor frequency of naive T cells is extremely low, investigating the early steps of antigen-specific T cell activation is challenging. To overcome this detection problem, adoptive transfer of a cohort of T cells purified from T cell receptor (TCR) transgenic donors has been extensively used but is not readily available for emerging pathogens. Constructing TCR transgenic mice from T cell hybridomas is a labor-intensive and sometimes erratic process, since the best clones are selected based on antigen-induced CD69 upregulation or IL-2 production in vitro, and TCR chains are polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-cloned into expression vectors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS Pathog
January 2025
The Westmead Institute for Medical Research, Westmead, New South Wales, Australia.
HIV infection implicates a spectrum of tissues in the human body starting with viral transmission in the anogenital tract and subsequently persisting in lymphoid tissues and brain. Though studies using isolated cells have contributed significantly towards our understanding of HIV infection, the tissue microenvironment is characterised by a complex interplay of a range of factors, all of which can influence the course of infection but are otherwise missed in ex vivo studies. To address this knowledge gap, it is necessary to investigate the dynamics of infection and the host immune response in situ using imaging-based approaches.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
January 2025
NIE-Indian Council of Medical Research-National Institute of Epidemiology, Chennai, India.
Background: Judicious utilisation of tertiary care facilities through appropriate risk stratification assumes priority, in a raging pandemic, of the nature of delta variant-predominated second wave of COVID-19 pandemic in India. Prioritisation of tertiary care, through a scientifically validated risk score, would maximise recovery without compromising individual safety, but importantly without straining the health system.
Methods: De-identified data of COVID-19 confirmed patients admitted to a tertiary care hospital in South India, between April 1, 2021 and July 31, 2021, corresponding to the peak of COVID-19 second wave, were analysed after segregating into 'survivors' or 'non-survivors' to evaluate the risk factors for COVID-19 mortality at admission and formulate a risk score with easily obtainable but clinically relevant parameters for accurate patient triaging.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis
January 2025
Department of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, Universidade Estadual de Santa Cruz, Ilhéus, Bahia, Brazil.
Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) is primarily associated with non-human-primates (NHPs) in Africa, which also infect humans. Since its introduction to Brazil in 2014, CHIKV has predominantly thrived in urban cycles, involving Aedes aegypti mosquitoes. Limited knowledge exists regarding CHIKV occurrence and implications in rural and sylvatic cycles where neotropical NHPs are potential hosts, from which we highlight Leontopithecus chrysomelas (Kuhl, 1820), the golden-headed lion tamarin (GHLT), an endangered species endemic to the Atlantic Forest (AF) in Southern Bahia State, Brazil.
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