RELACIONES FILOGENÉTICAS DEL VIRUS DE LA RABIA (LISSAVIRUS DE LA RABIA) EN DOS HUÉSPEDES DIFERENTES

Autores/as

  • Maicon da Silva Schreiber Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul (PUCRS), Porto Alegre, Brazil
  • Juliana Fachinetto Universidade Regional do Noroeste do Estado do Rio Grande do Sul (UNIJUÍ), Ijuí, Brazil https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0864-9643

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.35172/rvz.2024.v31.1537

Palabras clave:

bat, cattle, evolution, viral disease, viral infection

Resumen

La rabia es una zoonosis fatal que infecta a varias especies de mamíferos. Los murciélagos son reconocidos como huéspedes del virus de la rabia y su principal fuente de alimentación es la sangre de otros mamíferos, especialmente del ganado. Al alimentarse, los murciélagos transmiten el virus al ganado que es víctima de la enfermedad, contribuyendo a pérdidas económicas y riesgos de infección para los humanos. Basado en esta afinidad del ciclo de la rabia entre murciélagos y ganado, el objetivo de este estudio fue analizar las relaciones filogenéticas de las muestras de virus de la rabia tanto en huéspedes, ganado y murciélagos. El gen G del virus de la rabia fue elegido para esta investigación porque está directamente relacionado con el proceso de infección. Las secuencias de nucleótidos del gen G viral se seleccionaron en GenBank a partir de muestras obtenidas de bovinos y murciélagos infectados. Los análisis de parsimonia máxima se realizaron utilizando el software Molecular Evolutionary Genetics Analysis. El árbol de Máxima Parsimônia indicó una relación filogenética entre el gen G de ambos huéspedes, indicando que el virus evolucionó de murciélagos a bovinos. El análisis de los sitios parsimoniosamente informativos reveló que el gen G viral presentaba mutaciones específicas en cada huésped. El conocimiento sobre las relaciones evolutivas del virus de la rabia y sus huéspedes es crucial para identificar huéspedes potenciales y nuevas posibles rutas de infección para humanos.

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Publicado

2024-01-13

Cómo citar

1.
da Silva Schreiber M, Fachinetto J. RELACIONES FILOGENÉTICAS DEL VIRUS DE LA RABIA (LISSAVIRUS DE LA RABIA) EN DOS HUÉSPEDES DIFERENTES. RVZ [Internet]. 13 de enero de 2024 [citado 15 de mayo de 2024];31:1-7. Disponible en: https://rvz.emnuvens.com.br/rvz/article/view/1537

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