Temporal and coevolutionary analyses reveal the events driving the emergence and circulation of human mamastroviruses

Emerg Microbes Infect. 2023 Dec;12(1):2217942. doi: 10.1080/22221751.2023.2217942.

Abstract

Characterized by high genetic diversity, broad host range, and resistance to adverse conditions, coupled with recent reports of neurotropic astroviruses circulating in humans, mamastroviruses pose a threat to public health. The current astrovirus classification system based on host source prevents determining whether strains with distinct tropism or virulence are emerging. By using integrated phylogeny, we propose a standardized demarcation of species and genotypes, with reproducible cut-off values that reconcile the pairwise sequence distribution, genetic distances between lineages, and the topological reconstruction of the Mamastrovirus genus. We further define the various links established by co-evolution and resolve the dynamics of transmission chains to identify host-jump events and the sources from which different mamastrovirus species circulating in humans have emerged. We observed that recombination is relatively infrequent and restricted to within genotypes. The well-known "human" astrovirus, defined here as mamastrovirus species 7, has co-speciated with humans, while there have been two additional host-jumps into humans from distinct hosts. Newly defined species 6 genotype 2, linked to severe gastroenteritis in children, resulted from a marmot to human jump taking place ∼200 years ago while species 6 genotype 7 (MastV-Sp6Gt7), linked to neurological disease in immunocompromised patients, jumped from bovines only ∼50 years ago. Through demographic reconstruction, we determined that the latter reached coalescent viral population growth only 20 years ago and is evolving at a much higher evolutionary rate than other genotypes infecting humans. This study constitutes mounting evidence of MastV-Sp6Gt7 active circulation and highlights the need for diagnostics capable of detecting it.

Keywords: Bayesian inference of phylogeny; Mamastrovirus; cospeciation; host-jump event; pairwise sequence comparison; zoonotic emergence.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Astroviridae Infections* / epidemiology
  • Astroviridae*
  • Cattle
  • Child
  • Feces
  • Gastroenteritis*
  • Humans
  • Mamastrovirus* / genetics
  • Phylogeny