Published in

Microbiology Society, Journal of General Virology, 9(80), p. 2329-2335, 1999

DOI: 10.1099/0022-1317-80-9-2329

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Phylogenetic analysis of GB viruses A and C: evidence for cospeciation between virus isolates and their primate hosts

Journal article published in 1999 by Remi N. Charrel ORCID, Philippe de Micco, Xavier de Lamballerie
This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.
This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.

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Abstract

GB viruses A and C (GBV-A and GBV-C) have been isolated from humans and non-human primates. Phylogenetic analysis based on full-length polyproteins suggests that these two viruses have a common ancestor. It has now been determined that analysis of subgenomic amino acid sequences in the E2 and NS5 regions of GBV-A and a 345 nucleotide segment in the 5' non-coding (5'NC) region was able to reproduce the phylogenetic relationships obtained by complete polyprotein sequences analysis. Using 5'NC sequences from databases, GBV-A isolates were discriminated into eight genetic groups, each one closely associated with specific primate hosts. Phylogenetic analyses performed on sequences from the epsilon-globin genes of primate hosts on one hand and complete polyprotein sequences from GBV-A and GBV-C isolates on the other suggest that a mechanism of cospeciation could be involved in virus evolution over a period of 35 million years.