Mapping the global distribution and spread of the Plasmodium vivax -associated virus MaRNAV-1
Petrone ME., Charon J., Parry RH., Grigg MJ., Piera KA., Westaway JAF., Shioda K., Russell B., Price RN., William T., Kenangalem E., McCarthy JS., Barber BE., Holmes EC., Anstey NM.
Abstract Matryoshka RNA virus 1 (MaRNAV-1) is a bi-segmented and single-stranded RNA virus associated with Plasmodium vivax, a cause of human malaria. Little has been uncovered about the epidemiology and ecology of this virus since its discovery in 2019. To address this, we used a combination of primary and publicly available metatranscriptomic data to map the geographic distribution and host associations of MaRNAV-1. We detected this virus throughout Southeast Asia, in parts of South America, and, for the first time, in Oceania. Despite its broad distribution, MaRNAV-1 was found exclusively in metatranscriptomes containing P. vivax, suggesting that there is a specific virus-host relationship that has shaped the evolutionary history of this virus. We were unable to estimate the emergence date of the MaRNAV-1 lineage; however, phylogeographic mapping analysis suggested that MaRNAV-1 is widely dispersed throughout Southeast Asia. Our findings have both evolutionary and public health implications and can serve as the basis for future investigations in these fields.