Vsevolod L. Popov
University of Texas Medical Branch
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Featured researches published by Vsevolod L. Popov.
Journal of Virology | 2013
Nikos Vasilakis; Naomi L. Forrester; Gustavo Palacios; Farooq Nasar; Nazir Savji; Shannan L. Rossi; Hilda Guzman; Thomas G. Wood; Vsevolod L. Popov; Rodion Gorchakov; Ana Vázquez González; Andrew D. Haddow; Douglas M. Watts; Amelia Travassos da Rosa; Scott C. Weaver; W. Ian Lipkin; Robert B. Tesh
ABSTRACT Six novel insect-specific viruses, isolated from mosquitoes and phlebotomine sand flies collected in Brazil, Peru, the United States, Ivory Coast, Israel, and Indonesia, are described. Their genomes consist of single-stranded, positive-sense RNAs with poly(A) tails. By electron microscopy, the virions appear as spherical particles with diameters of ∼45 to 55 nm. Based on their genome organization and phylogenetic relationship, the six viruses, designated Negev, Ngewotan, Piura, Loreto, Dezidougou, and Santana, appear to form a new taxon, tentatively designated Negevirus. Their closest but still distant relatives are citrus leposis virus C (CiLV-C) and viruses in the genus Cilevirus, which are mite-transmitted plant viruses. The negeviruses replicate rapidly and to high titer (up to 1010 PFU/ml) in mosquito cells, producing extensive cytopathic effect and plaques, but they do not appear to replicate in mammalian cells or mice. A discussion follows on their possible biological significance and effect on mosquito vector competence for arboviruses.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Guoyan Zhao; Siddharth R. Krishnamurthy; Zhengqiu Cai; Vsevolod L. Popov; Amelia Travassos da Rosa; Hilda Guzman; Song Cao; Herbert W. Virgin; Robert B. Tesh; David Wang
Quick and accurate identification of microbial pathogens is essential for both diagnosis and response to emerging infectious diseases. The advent of next-generation sequencing technology offers an unprecedented platform for rapid sequencing-based identification of novel viruses. We have developed a customized bioinformatics data analysis pipeline, VirusHunter, for the analysis of Roche/454 and other long read Next generation sequencing platform data. To illustrate the utility of VirusHunter, we performed Roche/454 GS FLX titanium sequencing on two unclassified virus isolates from the World Reference Center for Emerging Viruses and Arboviruses (WRCEVA). VirusHunter identified sequences derived from a novel bunyavirus and a novel reovirus in the two samples respectively. Further sequence analysis demonstrated that the viruses were novel members of the Phlebovirus and Orbivirus genera. Both Phlebovirus and Orbivirus genera include many economic important viruses or serious human pathogens.
Journal of Virology | 2014
Felix W. Santiago; Lina M. Covaleda; Maria Teresa Sánchez-Aparicio; Jesus A. Silvas; Ana C. Diaz-Vizarreta; Jenish R. Patel; Vsevolod L. Popov; Xue Jie Yu; Adolfo García-Sastre; Patricia V. Aguilar
ABSTRACT Recognition of viral pathogens by the retinoic acid-inducible gene I (RIG-I)-like receptor (RLR) family results in the activation of type I interferon (IFN) responses. To avoid this response, most viruses have evolved strategies that target different essential steps in the activation of host innate immunity. In this study, we report that the nonstructural protein NSs of the newly described severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome virus (SFTSV) is a potent inhibitor of IFN responses. The SFTSV NSs protein was found to inhibit the activation of the beta interferon (IFN-β) promoter induced by viral infection and by a RIG-I ligand. Astonishingly, we found that SFTSV NSs interacts with and relocalizes RIG-I, the E3 ubiquitin ligase TRIM25, and TANK-binding kinase 1 (TBK1) into SFTSV NSs-induced cytoplasmic structures. Interestingly, formation of these SFTSV NSs-induced structures occurred in the absence of the Atg7 gene, a gene essential for autophagy. Furthermore, confocal microscopy studies revealed that these SFTSV NSs-induced structures colocalize with Rab5 but not with Golgi apparatus or endoplasmic reticulum markers. Altogether, the data suggest that sequestration of RIG-I signaling molecules into endosome-like structures may be the mechanism used by SFTSV to inhibit IFN responses and point toward a novel mechanism for the suppression of IFN responses. IMPORTANCE The mechanism by which the newly described SFTSV inhibits host antiviral responses has not yet been fully characterized. In this study, we describe the redistribution of RIG-I signaling components into virus-induced cytoplasmic structures in cells infected with SFTSV. This redistribution correlates with the inhibition of host antiviral responses. Further characterization of the interplay between the viral protein and components of the IFN responses could potentially provide targets for the rational development of therapeutic interventions.
Journal of General Virology | 2014
Albert J. Auguste; Christine V. F. Carrington; Naomi L. Forrester; Vsevolod L. Popov; Hilda Guzman; Steven G. Widen; Thomas G. Wood; Scott C. Weaver; Robert B. Tesh
Pools of mosquitoes were tested for insect-specific viruses using cytopathic effect (CPE) assays on Aedes albopictus (C6/36) cells. Illumina sequencing of RNA from pool TR7094, which produced extensive CPE 2 days post-infection, yielded the complete genome sequences of a previously unknown Bunyavirus, designated Cumuto virus (CUMV), and a second virus designated Wallerfield virus (WALV). WALV shared highest amino acid identity (60.1 %) with Dezidougou virus from Côte dIvoire, a positive-sense, single-strand RNA, insect-specific virus belonging to the newly proposed genus Negevirus associated with mosquitoes and phlebotomine sandflies. The S, M and L segments of CUMV were most closely related to those of Gouleako virus, also from Côte dIvoire (amino acid identities of 36 %, 38% and 54 % respectively). Neither virus produced CPE on vertebrate cells, or illness in newborn mice. Isolation and characterization of these viruses increase our knowledge of the geographical distribution, diversity and host range of mosquito-specific bunyaviruses and negeviruses.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013
Bin Gong; Thomas R. Shelite; Fang C. Mei; Tuha Ha; Yaohua Hu; Guang Xu; Qing Chang; Maki Wakamiya; Thomas G. Ksiazek; Paul J. Boor; Donald H. Bouyer; Vsevolod L. Popov; Ju Chen; David H. Walker; Xiaodong Cheng
Significance Our studies combining genetic and pharmacological manipulations provide convincing evidence that exchange protein directly activated by cAMP (Epac) 1 plays a critical role in fatal spotted fever group rickettsioses. Inhibition of Epac1 suppresses bacterial adhesion and/or invasion. Most importantly, we show that a small-molecule Epac inhibitor can prevent and suppress rickettsial infection. Our results demonstrate that Epac1-mediated signaling represents a mechanism for host–pathogen interactions and that Epac1 is a potential target for the prevention and treatment of fatal rickettsioses. This is significant from the biodefense viewpoint because it suggests that Epac1 inhibitor can be potentially used as a prophylaxis to thwart initial bacterial infection in the event of a bioterrorism threat. Rickettsiae are responsible for some of the most devastating human infections. A high infectivity and severe illness after inhalation make some rickettsiae bioterrorism threats. We report that deletion of the exchange protein directly activated by cAMP (Epac) gene, Epac1, in mice protects them from an ordinarily lethal dose of rickettsiae. Inhibition of Epac1 suppresses bacterial adhesion and invasion. Most importantly, pharmacological inhibition of Epac1 in vivo using an Epac-specific small-molecule inhibitor, ESI-09, completely recapitulates the Epac1 knockout phenotype. ESI-09 treatment dramatically decreases the morbidity and mortality associated with fatal spotted fever rickettsiosis. Our results demonstrate that Epac1-mediated signaling represents a mechanism for host–pathogen interactions and that Epac1 is a potential target for the prevention and treatment of fatal rickettsioses.
Virology | 2013
Andrew D. Haddow; Hilda Guzman; Vsevolod L. Popov; Thomas G. Wood; Steven G. Widen; Alastair D. Haddow; Robert B. Tesh; Scott C. Weaver
We report here the first evidence of vertical transmission of Aedes flavivirus (AEFV) and its first isolation in the Western Hemisphere. AEFV strain SPFLD-MO-2011-MP6 was isolated in C6/36 cells from a pool of male Aedes albopictus mosquitoes that were reared to adults from larvae collected in southwest Missouri, USA, in 2011. Electron micrographs of the virus showed virions of approximately 45nm in diameter with morphological characteristics associated with flaviviruses. The genomic sequence demonstrated that AEFV-SPFLD-MO-2011-MP6 shares a high degree of nucleotide and amino acid sequence identity with the AEFV Narita-21 strain, isolated in Japan in 2003. Intracerebral inoculation of newborn mice with the virus failed to produce observable illness or death and the virus did not replicate in vertebrate cells, consistent with a lack of vertebrate host range.
Journal of Virology | 2015
Albert J. Auguste; Jason T. Kaelber; Eric B. Fokam; Hilda Guzman; Christine V. F. Carrington; Jesse H. Erasmus; Basile Kamgang; Vsevolod L. Popov; Joanita Jakana; Xiangan Liu; Thomas G. Wood; Steven G. Widen; Nikos Vasilakis; Robert B. Tesh; Wah Chiu; Scott C. Weaver
ABSTRACT A total of 2,691 mosquitoes representing 17 species was collected from eight locations in southwest Cameroon and screened for pathogenic viruses. Ten isolates of a novel reovirus (genus Dinovernavirus) were detected by culturing mosquito pools on Aedes albopictus (C6/36) cell cultures. A virus that caused overt cytopathic effects was isolated, but it did not infect vertebrate cells or produce detectable disease in infant mice after intracerebral inoculation. The virus, tentatively designated Fako virus (FAKV), represents the first 9-segment, double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) virus to be isolated in nature. FAKV appears to have a broad mosquito host range, and its detection in male specimens suggests mosquito-to-mosquito transmission in nature. The structure of the T=1 FAKV virion, determined to subnanometer resolution by cryoelectron microscopy (cryo-EM), showed only four proteins per icosahedral asymmetric unit: a dimer of the major capsid protein, one turret protein, and one clamp protein. While all other turreted reoviruses of known structures have at least two copies of the clamp protein per asymmetric unit, FAKVs clamp protein bound at only one conformer of the major capsid protein. The FAKV capsid architecture and genome organization represent the most simplified reovirus described to date, and phylogenetic analysis suggests that it arose from a more complex ancestor by serial loss-of-function events. IMPORTANCE We describe the detection, genetic, phenotypic, and structural characteristics of a novel Dinovernavirus species isolated from mosquitoes collected in Cameroon. The virus, tentatively designated Fako virus (FAKV), is related to both single-shelled and partially double-shelled viruses. The only other described virus in this genus was isolated from cultured mosquito cells. It was previously unclear whether the phenotypic characteristics of that virus were reflective of this genus in nature or were altered during serial passaging in the chronically infected cell line. FAKV is a naturally occurring single-shelled reovirus with a unique virion architecture that lacks several key structural elements thought to stabilize a single-shelled reovirus virion, suggesting what may be the minimal number of proteins needed to form a viable reovirus particle. FAKV evolved from more complex ancestors by losing a genome segment and several virion proteins.
Cell Host & Microbe | 2016
Jason T. Ladner; Michael R. Wiley; Brett Beitzel; Albert J. Auguste; Alan P. Dupuis; Michael Lindquist; Samuel D. Sibley; Krishna P. Kota; David Fetterer; Gillian Eastwood; David Kimmel; Karla Prieto; Hilda Guzman; Matthew T. Aliota; Daniel Reyes; Ernst E. Brueggemann; Lena St. John; David Hyeroba; Michael Lauck; Thomas C. Friedrich; David H. O’Connor; Marie C. Gestole; Lisa H. Cazares; Vsevolod L. Popov; Fanny Castro-Llanos; Tadeusz J. Kochel; Tara Kenny; Bailey White; Michael D. Ward; Jose R. Loaiza
RNA viruses exhibit a variety of genome organizationxa0strategies, including multicomponent genomes inxa0which each segment is packaged separately. Although multicomponent genomes are common among viruses infecting plants and fungi, their prevalence among those infecting animals remains unclear. We characterize a multicomponent RNA virus isolated from mosquitoes, designated Guaico Culex virus (GCXV). GCXV belongs to a diverse clade of segmented viruses (Jingmenvirus) related to the prototypically unsegmented Flaviviridae. The GCXV genome comprises five segments, each of which appears to be separately packaged. The smallest segment is not required for replication, and its presence is variable in natural infections. We also describe a variant of Jingmen tick virus, another Jingmenvirus, sequenced from a Ugandan red colobus monkey, thus expanding the host range of this segmented and likely multicomponent virus group. Collectively, this study provides evidence for the existence of multicomponent animal viruses and theirxa0potential relevance for animal and human health.
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2015
Bethany G. Bolling; Nikos Vasilakis; Hilda Guzman; Steven G. Widen; Thomas G. Wood; Vsevolod L. Popov; Saravanan Thangamani; Robert B. Tesh
Recently, there has been a dramatic increase in the detection and characterization of insect-specific viruses in field-collected mosquitoes. Evidence suggests that these viruses are ubiquitous in nature and that many are maintained by vertical transmission in mosquito populations. Some studies suggest that the presence of insect-specific viruses may inhibit replication of a super-infecting arbovirus, thus altering vector competence of the mosquito host. Accordingly, we screened our laboratory mosquito colonies for insect-specific viruses. Pools of colony mosquitoes were homogenized and inoculated into cultures of Aedes albopictus (C6/36) cells. The infected cells were examined by electron microscopy and deep sequencing was performed on RNA extracts. Electron micrograph images indicated the presence of three different viruses in three of our laboratory mosquito colonies. Potential implications of these findings for vector competence studies are discussed.
Journal of General Virology | 2014
Nikos Vasilakis; Fanny Castro-Llanos; Steven G. Widen; Patricia V. Aguilar; Hilda Guzman; Carolina Guevara; Roberto Fernandez; Albert J. Auguste; Thomas G. Wood; Vsevolod L. Popov; Kirk Mundal; Elodie Ghedin; Tadeusz J. Kochel; Edward C. Holmes; Peter J. Walker; Robert B. Tesh
Arboretum virus (ABTV) and Puerto Almendras virus (PTAMV) are two mosquito-associated rhabdoviruses isolated from pools of Psorophora albigenu and Ochlerotattus fulvus mosquitoes, respectively, collected in the Department of Loreto, Peru, in 2009. Initial tests suggested that both viruses were novel rhabdoviruses and this was confirmed by complete genome sequencing. Analysis of their 11u200a482 nt (ABTV) and 11u200a876 (PTAMV) genomes indicates that they encode the five canonical rhabdovirus structural proteins (N, P, M, G and L) with an additional gene (U1) encoding a small hydrophobic protein. Evolutionary analysis of the L protein indicates that ABTV and PTAMV are novel and phylogenetically distinct rhabdoviruses that cannot be classified as members of any of the eight currently recognized genera within the family Rhabdoviridae, highlighting the vast diversity of this virus family.