Emerg Infect DiseidEmerging Infectious Diseases1080-60401080-6059Centers for Disease Control100816742627704Research ArticleGenetic diversity and distribution of Peromyscus-borne hantaviruses in North America.MonroeM. C.MorzunovS. P.JohnsonA. M.BowenM. D.ArtsobH.YatesT.PetersC. J.RollinP. E.KsiazekT. G.NicholS. T.Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia 30333, USA.Jan-Feb1999517586

The 1993 outbreak of hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS) in the southwestern United States was associated with Sin Nombre virus, a rodent-borne hantavirus; The virus' primary reservoir is the deer mouse (Peromyscus maniculatus). Hantavirus-infected rodents were identified in various regions of North America. An extensive nucleotide sequence database of an 139 bp fragment amplified from virus M genomic segments was generated. Phylogenetic analysis confirmed that SNV-like hantaviruses are widely distributed in Peromyscus species rodents throughout North America. Classic SNV is the major cause of HPS in North America, but other Peromyscine-borne hantaviruses, e.g., New York and Monongahela viruses, are also associated with HPS cases. Although genetically diverse, SNV-like viruses have slowly coevolved with their rodent hosts. We show that the genetic relationships of hantaviruses in the Americas are complex, most likely as a result of the rapid radiation and speciation of New World sigmodontine rodents and occasional virus-host switching events.