Dec.
11, 2012 — A new study of canine distemper virus (CDV) provides the first
evidence that the virus occurs as specialist strains that emerge in response to
strong evolutionary selection in the large global domestic dog population, and
as generalist strains adapted to infect a broad range of carnivore species that
occur as smaller host populations. The study not only unravelled one key
mechanism which led to the evolution of specialist and generalist strains, it
also showed that specialising on one host species comes at the cost of a
reduced ability to infect other host species.
Scientists
from the Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research (IZW), the Freie
Universität Berlin and the University of Göttingen in Germany, the
INRS-Institut Armand-Frappier in Canada and Cornell University in USA
investigated the 'lock and key' mechanism used by the canine distemper virus
(CDV) to gain entry into host cells. In the case of CDV, this mechanism
involves the binding of a specific protein of the virus (the CDV haemagglutinin
protein, CDV-H) to a specific receptor molecule on the host cell (the
signalling lymphocytic activation molecule, SLAM). The authors investigated
differences between SLAM receptors in wild and domestic carnivore species. This
revealed that SLAM receptors from different species in the dog family (Canidae)
were quite similar but that they differed substantially from those of species
in other carnivore families such as the cats (Felidae), hyenas (Hyaenidae),
martens (Mustelidae), seals (Phocidae) and walruses (Odobenidae). "As the
configuration of the 'lock' on the host cell varies considerably between dogs
and their close relatives on the one hand and carnivores from other families on
the other, we expected that the 'key' used by different strains of CDV to gain
entry to host cells would also show variation. Viruses constantly adapt to
improve their ability to infect their different host species" comments Klaus
Osterrieder (FU Berlin).
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