| Literature DB >> 18680642 |
Lisa Jones-Engel1, Cynthia C May, Gregory A Engel, Katherine A Steinkraus, Michael A Schillaci, Agustin Fuentes, Aida Rompis, Mukesh K Chalise, Nantiya Aggimarangsee, Mohammed M Feeroz, Richard Grant, Jonathan S Allan, Arta Putra, I Nengah Wandia, Robin Watanabe, LaRene Kuller, Satawat Thongsawat, Romanee Chaiwarith, Randall C Kyes, Maxine L Linial.
Abstract
In Asia, contact between persons and nonhuman primates is widespread in multiple occupational and nonoccupational contexts. Simian foamy viruses (SFVs) are retroviruses that are prevalent in all species of nonhuman primates. To determine SFV prevalence in humans, we tested 305 persons who lived or worked around nonhuman primates in several South and Southeast Asian countries; 8 (2.6%) were confirmed SFV positive by Western blot and, for some, by PCR. The interspecies interactions that likely resulted in virus transmission were diverse; 5 macaque taxa were implicated as a potential source of infection. Phylogenetic analysis showed that SFV from 3 infected persons was similar to that from the nonhuman primate populations with which the infected persons reported contact. Thus, SFV infections are likely to be prevalent among persons who live or work near nonhuman primates in Asia.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18680642 PMCID: PMC2562341 DOI: 10.3201/eid1408.071430
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Figure 1Western blot assays using human serum. Dilutions of human serum (lanes 2–11) or a foamy virus–-positive Macaca mulatta MBG8 (lane 1) were used to probe filter strips containing equal amounts of lysates from simian foamy virus–infected cells (from M. fascicularis; i lanes) or noninfected cells (u lanes). Individual strips were developed by using TMB reagent (3,3′,5,5′-tetramethylbenzidine; Promega, Madison, WI, USA). The positions of the viral proteins Gag and Bet are indicated. Lanes 10 and 11 show the range of reactivity seen with negative serum; lane 10 shows serum with nonspecific reactivity to proteins of approximately the same size as viral proteins; lane 11 shows serum negative for both lysates.
Figure 2Phylogenetic trees of simian foamy virus (SFV) sequences derived from 3 persons. Human-derived SFV sequences (shown in boldface) were compared with those obtained from macaques of the group with which the person had been in contact and to SFV from other macaques of the same species but different geographic origin. Neighbor-joining trees A and B used gag PCR primers (1,124 bp), and C used pol PCR primers (445 bp). A) SFV gag–derived from BGH4 DNA clusters more closely (94% of bootstrap samplings) with gag sequences from 4 Macaca mulatta that ranged throughout her village (MBG4, MBG11, MBG13, and MBG14) than with gag sequences obtained from Bangladeshi performing monkeys, M. mulatta (MBG7, MBG8), of unknown origin. BGH4 gag is equidistant from gag of MBG7, MBG8, and virus obtained from SFVmulO, an M. mulatta of unknown origin housed at the Oregon National Regional Primate Center. B) SFV gag from HAD3, a worker at a Bali monkey temple, grouped with gag from several M. fascicularis (AK4, AK19, AK23) found at the same temple (100% of bootstrap samplings). UB3 is also an M. fascicularis Bali temple monkey that inhabited a temple ≈15 km away. HAD3-derived gag is less similar to M. fascicularis from Singapore (SM) and SFVfasW, an M. fascicularis housed at the Washington National Primate Research Center. C) Analysis of pol confirms the relationships (100% of bootstrap samplings) between SFV sequences isolated from humans (HAD3 and HAD38) and those in the corresponding nonhuman primate populations with which they reported contact (AK4, AK19, AK23). HAD3 and HAD38 worked at the same temple site where AK are found. UB1 and UB3 are M. fascicularis from a nearby monkey temple. Scale bars indicate number of nucleotide substitutions per site.
Figure 3Map of the diverse contexts, countries, and nonhuman primate (Macaca) species associated with human infection with simian foamy virus.
Demographic and context data for 305 persons who lived and/or worked around nonhuman primates, Asia*
| Characteristic | N | % Total population | % (No.) bitten | % (No.) scratched | % (No.) splashed | % (No.) SFV+ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | ||||||
| Male | 172 | 56.4 | 28.9 (50) | 34.8 (60) | 25.6 (45) | 2.3 (4) |
| Female | 133 | 43.6 | 28.4 (38) | 28.6 (57) | 23.3 (31) | 3.0 (4) |
| Context†* | ||||||
| Temple | 234 | 76.7 | 25.6 (60) | 40.2 (94) | 27.4 (64) | 2.1 (5) |
| Pet | 21 | 6.9 | 52.4 (11) | 42.9 (9) | 38.1 (8) | 9.5 (2) |
| Bushmeat hunting | 23 | 7.5 | 0 | 4.3 (1) | 4.3 (1) | 0 |
| Zoo work | 8 | 2.6 | 75.0 (6) | 100.0 (8) | 0 | 0 |
| Urban | 19 | 6.2 | 57.9 (11) | 26.3 (5) | 15.8 (3) | 5.3 (1) |
| Total | 305 | 100.0 | 28.7 (88) | 38.4 (117) | 24.6 (75) | 2.6 (8) |
*SFV+, simian foamy virus positive. †Predominant form of human–nonhuman primate contact at the time of the study.
Persons at high risk for SFV, Asia*
| No | No | No | No | Total no. confirmed SFV positive | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Thailand | 211† | 15 | 3 | NA | 3 |
| Nepal | 9 | 1 | 1 | NA | 1 |
| Indonesia | 74 | 8 | 3 | 2 | 3 |
| Bangladesh | 11 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Total | 305 | 25 | 8 | 3 | 8 (2.6%) |
*WB, Western blot; SFV, simian foamy virus; NA, not applicable. †65/213 serum samples were bioplex reactive and further screened with glutathione S-transferase-Gag ELISA.
Exposure characteristics of SFV-positive persons who had had contact with nonhuman primates, Asia*
| Person | Sequence | Sex/age, y | Location | Context of contact | Nonhuman primate contacted | Reported exposures |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HCM2 | NA | M/56 | Southern Thailand | Primate owner, pet |
| Multiple bites and scratches |
| HMS14 | NA | F/44 | Northern Thailand | Village resident, temple and pet | Bleeding scratches | |
| HMS50 | NA | M/43 | Northern Thailand | Village resident, temple |
| None |
| HUB7 | NA | M/35 | UB, Bali, Indonesia | Temple worker, temple |
| >4 bites over many y |
| HAD38 |
| F/32 | AK, Bali, Indonesia | Temple worker, temple |
| 2 bites within 1 y + 1 scratch |
| HAD3 |
| M/58 | AK, Bali, Indonesia | Temple worker, primate owner, temple and pet |
| Multiple bites, scratches |
| NH2 | NA | F/36 | Kathmandu, Nepal | Village resident, temple |
| Severe bite |
| BGH4 |
| F/19 | DH, Bangladesh | Village resident, urban |
| Severe bite 17 y ago |
*SFV, Simian foamy virus; NA, not applicable. All persons were confirmed SFV positive by Western blot.