Organization of the multigene families of African Swine Fever Virus

Authors

  • Jacob Imbery University of Victoria
  • Chris Upton University of Victoria

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33043/FF.3.2.155-170

Keywords:

African swine fever virus, Multigene family, Annotation, Bioinformatics, Genomics

Abstract

African swine fever virus is a complex DNA virus that infects swine and is spread by ticks. Mortality rates in domestic pigs are very high and the virus is a significant threat to pork farming. The genomes of 16 viruses have been sequenced completely, but these represent only a few of the 23 genotypes. The viral genome is unusual in that it contains 5 multigene families, each of which contain 3-19 duplicated copies (paralogs). There is significant sequence divergence between the paralogs in a single virus and between the orthologs in the different viral genomes. This, together with the fact that in most of the multigene families there are numerous gene indels that create truncations and fusions, makes annotation of these regions very difficult; it has led to inconsistent annotation of the 16 viral genomes. In this project, we have created multiple sequence alignments for each of the multigene families and have produced gene maps to help researchers more easily understand the organization of the multigene families among the different viruses. These gene maps will help researchers ascertain which members of the multigene families are present in each of the viruses. This is critical because some of the multigene families are known to be associated with virus virulence.

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Published

2017-08-01

How to Cite

Imbery, J., & Upton, C. (2017). Organization of the multigene families of African Swine Fever Virus. Fine Focus, 3(2), 155–170. https://doi.org/10.33043/FF.3.2.155-170