Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W1567506364> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W1567506364 endingPage "5725" @default.
- W1567506364 startingPage "5714" @default.
- W1567506364 abstract "Papillomaviruses are attractive models for studying the molecular evolution of DNA viruses because of the large number of isolates that exhibit genomic diversity and host species and tissue specificity. To examine their relationship, we selected two amino acid sequences, one of 52 residues within the early gene E1 and the other of 44 residues within the late gene L1, which allowed insertion- and deletion-free alignment of all accessible papillomavirus sequences. We constructed phylogenetic trees from the amino acid and corresponding nucleotide sequences from 28 published and 20 newly determined animal and human papillomavirus (HPV) genomic sequences by using distance matrix, maximum-likelihood, and parsimony methods. The trees agreed in all important topological aspects. One major branch with two clearly separated clusters contained 11 HPV types associated with epidermodysplasia verruciformis. A second major branch had all the papillomaviruses involved in genital neoplasia and, in distant relationship, the cutaneous papillomaviruses HPV type 2a (HPV-2a), HPV-3, and HPV-10 as well as the butcher's papillomavirus HPV-7 and two simian papillomaviruses. Four artiodactyl (even-toed hoofed mammal) papillomaviruses, the cottontail rabbit papillomavirus, and avian (chaffinch) papillomavirus type 1 formed a third major branch. Last, four papillomaviruses exhibited little affinity to any of these three branches; these were the cutaneous types HPV-1a, HPV-4, and HPV-41 and B-group bovine papillomavirus type 4. The phylogeny suggests that some branches of papillomavirus evolution are restricted to particular target tissues and that a general process of long-term papillomavirus-host coevolution has occurred. This latter hypothesis is still conjectural because of bias in the current data base for human types and the paucity of animal papillomavirus sequences. The comparison of evolutionary distances for the most closely related types with those of 28 subtypes and variants of HPV-2, HPV-5, HPV-6, HPV-16, and HPV-18 supports the type as a natural taxonomic unit, with subtypes and variants being expressions of minor intratype genomic diversity similar to that found in the natural populations of all biological species. An exception to this seems to be HPV-2c, which has an evolutionary distance from HPV-2a of the intertype magnitude and may eventually have to be regarded as a distinct type. We describe an experimental approach that estimates the taxonomic and phylogenetic positions of newly identified papillomaviruses without viral isolation and complete genomic sequencing.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)" @default.
- W1567506364 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W1567506364 creator A5031771018 @default.
- W1567506364 creator A5036353097 @default.
- W1567506364 creator A5040458480 @default.
- W1567506364 creator A5071201547 @default.
- W1567506364 creator A5073856927 @default.
- W1567506364 creator A5078766684 @default.
- W1567506364 date "1992-10-01" @default.
- W1567506364 modified "2023-10-09" @default.
- W1567506364 title "Phylogenetic analysis of 48 papillomavirus types and 28 subtypes and variants: a showcase for the molecular evolution of DNA viruses" @default.
- W1567506364 cites W1500130815 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W1503003173 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W1566744867 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W1648530675 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W1729854193 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W1774955313 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W1957890909 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W1958479839 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W1972145433 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W1976366421 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W1981848762 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W1986388571 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W1987812236 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W1997695346 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2017477982 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2020544327 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2020968809 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2024472841 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2025762035 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2030735803 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2031033537 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2033394272 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2037667459 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2039360725 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2041076979 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2042611229 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2048186135 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2061054814 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2061610377 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2065461553 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2065765062 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2072889251 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2073337122 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2087726910 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2091704552 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2093282605 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2097706568 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2121864361 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2130435870 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2135259160 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2138763100 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2138892620 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2143080883 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2149522574 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2154284350 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2165801219 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2168662030 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2170643695 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W4244299745 @default.
- W1567506364 cites W2416978140 @default.
- W1567506364 doi "https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.66.10.5714-5725.1992" @default.
- W1567506364 hasPubMedCentralId "https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/241446" @default.
- W1567506364 hasPubMedId "https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/1326639" @default.
- W1567506364 hasPublicationYear "1992" @default.
- W1567506364 type Work @default.
- W1567506364 sameAs 1567506364 @default.
- W1567506364 citedByCount "122" @default.
- W1567506364 countsByYear W15675063642012 @default.
- W1567506364 countsByYear W15675063642013 @default.
- W1567506364 countsByYear W15675063642014 @default.
- W1567506364 countsByYear W15675063642015 @default.
- W1567506364 countsByYear W15675063642016 @default.
- W1567506364 countsByYear W15675063642018 @default.
- W1567506364 countsByYear W15675063642022 @default.
- W1567506364 countsByYear W15675063642023 @default.
- W1567506364 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W1567506364 hasAuthorship W1567506364A5031771018 @default.
- W1567506364 hasAuthorship W1567506364A5036353097 @default.
- W1567506364 hasAuthorship W1567506364A5040458480 @default.
- W1567506364 hasAuthorship W1567506364A5071201547 @default.
- W1567506364 hasAuthorship W1567506364A5073856927 @default.
- W1567506364 hasAuthorship W1567506364A5078766684 @default.
- W1567506364 hasBestOaLocation W15675063641 @default.
- W1567506364 hasConcept C104317684 @default.
- W1567506364 hasConcept C121608353 @default.
- W1567506364 hasConcept C141231307 @default.
- W1567506364 hasConcept C159047783 @default.
- W1567506364 hasConcept C166393388 @default.
- W1567506364 hasConcept C193252679 @default.
- W1567506364 hasConcept C2522874641 @default.
- W1567506364 hasConcept C2776270601 @default.
- W1567506364 hasConcept C2776781592 @default.
- W1567506364 hasConcept C2778220009 @default.
- W1567506364 hasConcept C2780265533 @default.
- W1567506364 hasConcept C54355233 @default.
- W1567506364 hasConcept C86803240 @default.
- W1567506364 hasConcept C90132467 @default.