| Journal of General Virology |
| First posted online 12 September 2000 | ARTICLE ABSTRACT |
| Rec 5 June 2000; Acc 15 August 2000 | DOI: 10.1099/vir.0.17188-0 |
Kari Asikainen,1 Tarja Hänninen,1 Heikki Henttonen,2 Jukka Niemimaa,2 Juha Laakkonen,3 Hans Kerzel Andersen,4 Nils Bille5, Herwig Leirs,5 Antti Vaheri1 and Alexander Plyusnin1
1 Department of Virology,
Haartman Institute, University of Helsinki, FIN-00014 Helsinki, Finland
2 Department of Forest Ecology, Finnish Forest Research
Institute, FIN-01301 Vantaa, Finland
3 Department of Anatomy, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine,
University of Helsinki, FIN-00581, Helsinki, Finland
4 Department of Clinical Microbiology, Aarhus University
Hospital, 8000 Aarhus, Denmark
5 Danish Pest Infestation Laboratory, 2800 Lyngby, Copenhagen,
Denmark
Like other members of the genus Hantavirus in the family Bunyaviridae, Puumala virus (PUUV) is thought to be co-evolving with its natural host, the bank vole Clethrionomys glareolus. To gain insight into the evolutionary history of PUUV in northern Europe during the last post-glacial period, we have studied wild-type PUUV strains originating from areas along two postulated immigration routes of bank voles to Fennoscandia. Full-length sequences of the S RNA segment and partial sequences (nt 21682569) of the M segment were recovered by RTPCR directly from bank vole tissues collected at three locations in Russian Karelia and one location in Denmark. Phylogenetic analysis showed that strains from Karelia and Finland belong to the same genetic lineage, supporting the hypothesis that PUUV spread to present Finland via a Karelian land-bridge. The Danish PUUV strains showed no particularly close relatedness to any of the known PUUV strains and formed a distinct phylogenetic lineage on trees calculated for both S and M segment sequences. Although no direct link between the Danish PUUV strains and those of the southern Scandinavian lineage was found, within the S segment of Danish PUUV strains, two regions with higher similarity to either northern Scandinavian or to a less extent southern Scandinavian genetic lineages were revealed, suggesting evolutionary connections of their precursors.
© 2000 SGM
This article is now available in the December 2000 print issue of JGV (vol. 81, 28332841). The complete issue of the journal may be seen in electronic form on JGV Online.