Genome Sequences of Akhmeta Virus, an Early Divergent Old World Orthopoxvirus.
Jinxin GaoCrystal M GiganteEkaterine KhmaladzePengbo LiuShiyuyun TangKimberly WilkinsKun ZhaoWhitni DavidsonYoshinori NakazawaGiorgi MaghlakelidzeMarika GeleishviliMaka KokhreidzeDarin S CarrollGinny EmersonYu LiPublished in: Viruses (2018)
Annotated whole genome sequences of three isolates of the Akhmeta virus (AKMV), a novel species of orthopoxvirus (OPXV), isolated from the Akhmeta and Vani regions of the country Georgia, are presented and discussed. The AKMV genome is similar in genomic content and structure to that of the cowpox virus (CPXV), but a lower sequence identity was found between AKMV and Old World OPXVs than between other known species of Old World OPXVs. Phylogenetic analysis showed that AKMV diverged prior to other Old World OPXV. AKMV isolates formed a monophyletic clade in the OPXV phylogeny, yet the sequence variability between AKMV isolates was higher than between the monkeypox virus strains in the Congo basin and West Africa. An AKMV isolate from Vani contained approximately six kb sequence in the left terminal region that shared a higher similarity with CPXV than with other AKMV isolates, whereas the rest of the genome was most similar to AKMV, suggesting recombination between AKMV and CPXV in a region containing several host range and virulence genes.