RT Journal Article SR Electronic(1) A1 Bigot, Diane A1 Dalmon, Anne A1 Roy, Bronwen A1 Hou, Chunsheng A1 Germain, Michèle A1 Romary, Manon A1 Deng, Shuai A1 Diao, Qingyun A1 Weinert, Lucy A. A1 Cook, James M. A1 Herniou, Elisabeth A. A1 Gayral, PhilippeYR 2017 T1 The discovery of Halictivirus resolves the Sinaivirus phylogeny JF Journal of General Virology, VO 98 IS 11 SP 2864 OP 2875 DO https://doi.org/10.1099/jgv.0.000957 PB Microbiology Society, SN 1465-2099, AB By providing pollination services, bees are among the most important insects, both in ecological and economical terms. Combined next-generation and classical sequencing approaches were applied to discover and study new insect viruses potentially harmful to bees. A bioinformatics virus discovery pipeline was used on individual Illumina transcriptomes of 13 wild bees from three species from the genus Halictus and 30 ants from six species of the genera Messor and Aphaenogaster. This allowed the discovery and description of three sequences of a new virus termed Halictus scabiosae Adlikon virus (HsAV). Phylogenetic analyses of ORF1, RNA-dependent RNA-polymerase (RdRp) and capsid genes showed that HsAV is closely related to (+)ssRNA viruses of the unassigned Sinaivirus genus but distant enough to belong to a different new genus we called Halictivirus. In addition, our study of ant transcriptomes revealed the first four sinaivirus sequences from ants (Messor barbarus, M. capitatus and M. concolor). Maximum likelihood phylogenetic analyses were performed on a 594 nt fragment of the ORF1/RdRp region from 84 sinaivirus sequences, including 31 new Lake Sinai viruses (LSVs) from honey bees collected in five countries across the globe and the four ant viral sequences. The phylogeny revealed four main clades potentially representing different viral species infecting honey bees. Moreover, the ant viruses belonged to the LSV4 clade, suggesting a possible cross-species transmission between bees and ants. Lastly, wide honey bee screening showed that all four LSV clades have worldwide distributions with no obvious geographical segregation., UL https://www.microbiologyresearch.org/content/journal/jgv/10.1099/jgv.0.000957