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Wide distribution and ancient evolutionary history of simian foamy viruses in New World primates

Authors :
Matthew R. Kasper
Aris Katzourakis
Bruno M. Ghersi
Joel M. Montgomery
William M. Switzer
Hongwei Jia
Patricia Mendoza
Daniel G. Bausch
Pakorn Aiewsakun
Source :
Retrovirology
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2015.

Abstract

Background Although simian foamy viruses (SFV) are the only exogenous retroviruses to infect New World monkeys (NWMs), little is known about their evolutionary history and epidemiology. Previous reports show distinct SFVs among NWMs but were limited to small numbers of captive or wild monkeys from five (Cebus, Saimiri, Ateles, Alouatta, and Callithrix) of the 15 NWM genera. Other studies also used only PCR testing or serological assays with limited validation and may have missed infection in some species. We developed and validated new serological and PCR assays to determine the prevalence of SFV in blood specimens from a large number of captive NWMs in the US (n = 274) and in captive and wild-caught NWMs (n = 236) in Peruvian zoos, rescue centers, and illegal trade markets. Phylogenetic and co-speciation reconciliation analyses of new SFV polymerase (pol) and host mitochondrial cytochrome B sequences, were performed to infer SFV and host co-evolutionary histories. Results 124/274 (45.2 %) of NWMs captive in the US and 59/157 (37.5 %) of captive and wild-caught NWMs in Peru were SFV WB-positive representing 11 different genera (Alouatta, Aotus, Ateles, Cacajao, Callithrix, Cebus, Lagothrix, Leontopithecus, Pithecia, Saguinus and Saimiri). Seroprevalences were lower at rescue centers (10/53, 18.9 %) compared to zoos (46/97, 47.4 %) and illegal trade markets (3/7, 8/19, 42.9 %) in Peru. Analyses showed that the trees of NWM hosts and SFVs have remarkably similar topologies at the level of species and sub-populations suggestive of co-speciation. Phylogenetic reconciliation confirmed 12 co-speciation events (p

Details

ISSN :
17424690
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Retrovirology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....aae53cca27b6669b866c1e065b0c5e13
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12977-015-0214-0