Novel snake Circovirus from alpine pit viper (Gloydius strauchi) in China: evidence of a mammal-avian genetic recombinant
Zhige Tian, Sirong Luo, Jiayi Li, Xingyu Liu, Yingxi Huang, Yuping Fan, Chenlei Zhou, Peng Guo, Xiaoliang Hu

TL;DR
A new recombinant circovirus was found in an alpine pit viper in China, showing genetic links to both mammals and birds.
Contribution
Discovery of a novel recombinant circovirus in a high-altitude snake species.
Findings
GsCV1 has a 1,811-bp circular DNA genome with Rep and Cap proteins.
Phylogenetic analysis shows Rep clustering with mammalian and Cap with avian circoviruses.
Recombination events involved BatACV3, SwCV, and ZfiCV in GsCV1's origin.
Abstract
Circoviruses within the family Circoviridae have been identified across diverse vertebrate taxa, including mammals, birds, and reptiles. This study investigated the oral cavity of the Asian pit viper (Gloydius strauchi) in southwestern China using PCR assay. The presence of Circovirus strain GsCV1 in oral samples was confirmed using PCR with consensus primers. In this study, a recombinant Circovirus strain (GsCV1) was detected in the oral cavity of the Asian pit viper (Gloydius strauchi), a high-altitude species endemic to the plateaus (1,500–4,500 m) of Sichuan Province, China. Complete genome sequencing revealed a 1,811-bp circular DNA genome encoding two principal open reading frames for the replication-associated (Rep) and capsid (Cap) proteins, along with a conserved 9-bp nucleotide nonamer motif located at the apex of the stem-loop structure. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnimal Virus Infections Studies · SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 Research · COVID-19 Clinical Research Studies
