Mutations in Everglades virus portend possible new threat to large animals

Dr. Maureen Long, a professor of virology and equine medicine at UF, was a study co-author.

By Sarah Carey
Dr. Maureen Long

Dr. Maureen Long

In a new study, University of Florida researchers report that Everglades virus, or EVEV — endemic in South Florida and a subtype of the highly pathogenic Venezuelan equine encephalitis — has mutated, suggesting a possible new threat to horses and other large mammals.

“This virus is changing and it’s changing in the protein that binds to cells. This is important because it may change what mosquitoes can transmit the virus and what hosts it can infect,” said Maureen Long, D.V.M., Ph.D., a professor of virology and equine medicine at the UF College of Veterinary Medicine. “While we don’t know the meaning of this particular change without further study, in mosquito-borne viruses, it only takes one or two mutations to have profound effects on human and animal disease.”

The EVEV study, published recently in Virus Evolution, was coauthored by Long, Carla Mavian, M.D., Ph.D., an assistant scientist who studies the molecular evolution of infectious diseases in the UF College of Medicine and others, including Monica Valente, a D.V.M. student who participated in the Florida Veterinary Scholars Program, and graduate student Dhani Prakoso, who performed the sequencing of the virus itself. This project was funded by the UF Research Opportunity Seed Grant and involved the combined efforts of Jason Burkett-Cadena of the UF-IFAS Florida Medical Entomology Laboratory, Robert McCleery of the department of wildlife ecology and conservation and Long at the College of Veterinary Medicine.

Researchers say this is the first report that shows in detail the evolution of EVEV in South Florida.

First isolated in the 1960s, antibodies to EVEV were discovered in humans, along with mostly rodents and some dogs, Long said. The virus was also reported to cause febrile illness in a human. Prior to this current work only two isolated viruses had been sequenced — one from the 1960s and the other from 2013, she added.

“Importantly, this virus is in the same family as Venezuelan equine encephalitis, or VEEV, which was eradicated from the United States but is always a constant threat. The VEEV virus can cause severe epidemics as well as infections in horses such that the horse can transmit the virus,” Long said. “The Everglades virus, which has been hanging around in mosquitoes and cotton rats in the swamps of that region, has had a very narrowly defined life cycle with the mosquito that transmits it. People and animals might get exposed but probably don’t get severe disease.”

But two new recent mutations, which researchers pinpointed through gene sequencing and phylogenic analysis, showed that isolates of the virus had clustered, based on the location of sampling, into two monophyletic clades that diverged in 2009. These new mutations may result in adaptation to a mosquito vector or new host, the researchers said.

“Finding these recent mutations could be fairly meaningful for understanding the future activity of EVEV and whether or not this virus has the capacity to cause more disease in humans and horses and other species, as happens with VEEV,” Long said.