A novel strain of <i>Leishmania braziliensis</i> harbors not a toti- but a bunyavirus

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Authors

KOSTYGOV Alexei Yu GRYBCHUK Danyil HEEREN Senne GERASIMOV Evgeny S. KLOCEK Donnamae REDDY Aditya SADLOVA Jovana PACAKOVA Lenka KOHL Alain STEJSKAL Frantisek VOLF Petr DUJARDIN Jean-Claude YURCHENKO Vyacheslav

Year of publication 2024
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source PLoS neglected tropical diseases
MU Faculty or unit

Central European Institute of Technology

Citation
web https://journals.plos.org/plosntds/article?id=10.1371/journal.pntd.0012767
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0012767
Keywords RNA VIRUS; GENETIC EXCHANGE; SAND FLIES; SEQUENCE; DIVERSITY; ALIGNMENT; VIANNIA; FOCUS; TRYPANOSOMATIDS; HYBRIDIZATION
Description Leishmania is a genus of the family Trypanosomatidae that unites obligatory parasitic flagellates causing a variety of vector-borne diseases collectively called leishmaniasis. The symptoms range from relatively innocuous skin lesions to complete failures of visceral organs. The disease is exacerbated if a parasite harbors Leishmania RNA viruses (LRVs) of the family Pseudototiviridae. Screening a novel isolate of L. braziliensis, we revealed that it possesses not a toti-, but a bunyavirus of the family Leishbuviridae. To the best of our knowledge, this is a very first discovery of a bunyavirus infecting a representative of the Leishmania subgenus Viannia. We suggest that these viruses may serve as potential factors of virulence in American leishmaniasis and encourage researchers to test leishmanial strains for the presence of not only LRVs, but also other RNA viruses.
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