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VIRAL METAGENOMICS UNVEILS MW (MALAWI) POLYOMAVIRUS INFECTION IN BRAZILIAN PEDIATRIC PATIENTS WITH ACUTE RESPIRATORY DISEASE.

Anielly Sarana da SilvaGabriel Montenegro de CamposMarta GiovanettiVictória Simonatto ZucheratoAlex Ranieri Jerônimo LimaElaine Vieira SantosRodrigo HaddadMassimo CiccozziLuiz Carlos Júnior AlcantaraMaria Carolina EliasSandra Coccuzzo SampaioDimas Tadeu CovasSimone KashimaSvetoslav Nanev Slavov
Published in: Journal of medical virology (2023)
Viral metagenomics has been extensively applied for the identification of emerging or poorly characterized viruses. In this study, we applied metagenomics for the identification of viral infections among pediatric patients with acute respiratory disease but who tested negative for SARS-CoV-2. Twelve pools composed of 8 nasopharyngeal specimens were submitted to viral metagenomics. Surprisingly, in two of the pools, we identified reads belonging to the poorly characterized Malawi polyomavirus (MWPyV). Then, the samples composing the positive pools were individually tested using qPCR for identification of the MWPyV index cases. MWPyV positive samples were also submitted to respiratory virus panel testing due to the metagenomic identification of different clinically important viruses. Of note, MWPyV positive samples tested also positive for respiratory syncytial virus types A and B. In this study, we retrieved two complete MWPyV genome sequences from the index samples that were submitted to phylogenetic inference to investigate their viral origin. Our study represents the first molecular and genomic characterization of MWPyV obtained from pediatric patients in South America. The detection of MWPyV in acutely infected infants suggests that this virus might participate (co-participate) in cases of respiratory symptoms. Nevertheless, future studies based on testing of a larger number of clinical samples and MWPyV complete genomes appear to be necessary to elucidate if this emerging polyomavirus might be clinically important. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
Keyphrases
  • sars cov
  • respiratory syncytial virus
  • respiratory syndrome coronavirus
  • single cell
  • multidrug resistant
  • young adults
  • bioinformatics analysis
  • coronavirus disease
  • microbial community