Genomic Sequencing and Phylogenomics of Cowpox Virus

Viruses. 2022 Sep 28;14(10):2134. doi: 10.3390/v14102134.

Abstract

Cowpox virus (CPXV; genus Orthopoxvirus; family Poxviridae) is the causative agent of cowpox, a self-limiting zoonotic infection. CPXV is endemic in Eurasia, and human CPXV infections are associated with exposure to infected animals. In the Fennoscandian region, five CPXVs isolated from cats and humans were collected and used in this study. We report the complete sequence of their genomes, which ranged in size from 220-222 kbp, containing between 215 and 219 open reading frames. The phylogenetic analysis of 87 orthopoxvirus strains, including the Fennoscandian CPXV isolates, confirmed the division of CPXV strains into at least five distinct major clusters (CPXV-like 1, CPXV-like 2, VACV-like, VARV-like and ECTV-Abatino-like) and can be further divided into eighteen sub-species based on the genetic and patristic distances. Bayesian time-scaled evolutionary history of CPXV was reconstructed employing concatenated 62 non-recombinant conserved genes of 55 CPXV. The CPXV evolution rate was calculated to be 1.65 × 10-5 substitution/site/year. Our findings confirmed that CPXV is not a single species but a polyphyletic assemblage of several species and thus, a reclassification is warranted.

Keywords: Fennoscandian; cowpox virus; molecular clock; orthopoxvirus; phylodynamics; phylogenetic; poxviridae.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Bayes Theorem
  • Cowpox virus
  • Cowpox* / veterinary
  • Genomics
  • Humans
  • Orthopoxvirus* / genetics
  • Phylogeny

Grants and funding

This research was funded by UiT—The Arctic University of Norway, grant number A212100108 and the National Graduate School in Infection Biology and Antimicrobials, grant number 249062. The APC was funded by UiT—The Arctic University of Norway.