| Literature DB >> 22253731 |
Kristine M Smith1, Simon J Anthony, William M Switzer, Jonathan H Epstein, Tracie Seimon, Hongwei Jia, Maria D Sanchez, Thanh Thao Huynh, G Gale Galland, Sheryl E Shapiro, Jonathan M Sleeman, Denise McAloose, Margot Stuchin, George Amato, Sergios-Orestis Kolokotronis, W Ian Lipkin, William B Karesh, Peter Daszak, Nina Marano.
Abstract
The global trade in wildlife has historically contributed to the emergence and spread of infectious diseases. The United States is the world's largest importer of wildlife and wildlife products, yet minimal pathogen surveillance has precluded assessment of the health risks posed by this practice. This report details the findings of a pilot project to establish surveillance methodology for zoonotic agents in confiscated wildlife products. Initial findings from samples collected at several international airports identified parts originating from nonhuman primate (NHP) and rodent species, including baboon, chimpanzee, mangabey, guenon, green monkey, cane rat and rat. Pathogen screening identified retroviruses (simian foamy virus) and/or herpesviruses (cytomegalovirus and lymphocryptovirus) in the NHP samples. These results are the first demonstration that illegal bushmeat importation into the United States could act as a conduit for pathogen spread, and suggest that implementation of disease surveillance of the wildlife trade will help facilitate prevention of disease emergence.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22253731 PMCID: PMC3254615 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0029505
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Nonhuman primate bushmeat specimens confiscated at US airports.
Examples of smuggled simian bushmeat (a) skull, (b) hand, (c) skull and torso, and (d) arm. Ruler units are centimeters.
Species identification and viruses found in smuggled nonhuman primate bushmeat samples1.
| Species | Common name | Sample number | Tissue | LCV | CMV | SFV | Origin of package | Destination of package |
|
| green monkey | CII-040 | Bone marrow | + | Guinea | Staten Island, NY | ||
|
| green monkey | CII-051 | Bone marrow | + | + | Guinea | Staten Island, NY | |
|
| green monkey | CII-044 | Trachea | + | Guinea | Staten Island, NY | ||
|
| green monkey | CII-144 | Trachea | + | Guinea | Staten Island, NY | ||
|
| greater white-nosed monkey | BM002 | Muscle | + | Nigeria | Dallas, TX | ||
|
| baboon | CII-013 | Bone marrow | + | Guinea | Staten Island, NY | ||
|
| baboon | CII-028 | Spinal nerve | + | Guinea | Staten Island, NY | ||
| Muscle | + | |||||||
|
| baboon | CII-046 | Right eye | + | Guinea | Staten Island, NY | ||
|
| baboon | CII-163 | Optic nerve | + | + | Guinea | Staten Island, NY | |
| Right eye | + | + | ||||||
| Trachea | + | + | ||||||
|
| sooty mangabey | BM008 | Muscle | + | + | Liberia | Philadelphia, PA | |
|
| sooty mangabey | BM010 | Muscle | + | Liberia | Philadelphia, PA | ||
|
| Nigeria-Cameroon chimpanzee | BM013 | Muscle | + | Nigeria | Queens, NY |
Only samples testing positive are listed. All other rodent and simian samples were negative for all pathogens tested.
Species identification inferred with phylogenetic analysis.
Figure 2Inferred phylogenetic relationships of SFV pol sequences detected in bushmeat samples.
Neighbor-joining (NJ) and maximum-likelihood (ML) analysis gave identical branching orders. New SFV sequences identified in this study are boxed. Clades of sequences from Mandrillus, Cercopithicus, Chlorocebus, Macaca, Pongo, Gorilla, and Pan paniscus are collapsed for presentation. Branch lengths are drawn to scale and only bootstrap values (NJ/ML) greater than 70% are shown.
Figure 3Inferred phylogenetic relationships of SFV pol (∼153 bp) sequences detected in USFWS bushmeat samples.
Neighbor-joining (NJ) and maximum-likelihood (ML) analysis gave identical branching orders. New SFV sequences identified in this study are underlined.
Figure 4Inferred phylogenetic relationships of herpesviruses detected in siman bushmeat samples.
Neighbor-joining (NJ) and maximum-likelihood (ML) analysis gave identical branching orders. Sequences identified in bushmeat products are underlined and cluster with sub-families betaherpesvirus (samples: CII-028, CII-163, BM-002), and gammaherpesvirus (samples: CII-163, CII-013, CII-051, CII-044, CII-144, CII-040, BM-008).