| Literature DB >> 24662675 |
Hester Buitendijk1, Zahra Fagrouch2, Henk Niphuis3, Willy M Bogers4, Kristin S Warren5, Ernst J Verschoor6.
Abstract
Great apes are extremely sensitive to infections with human respiratory viruses. In this study, we retrospectively analyzed sera from captive chimpanzees, gorillas and orang-utans. More than 1000 sera (403 chimpanzee, 77 gorilla, and 535 orang-utan sera) were analyzed for antibodies to the human respiratory viruses RSV (respiratory syncytial virus, hMPV (human metapneumovirus), H1N1 and H3N2 influenza A viruses, and influenza B virus. In all ape species high seroprevalences were found for RSV, hMPV, and influenza B virus. A high percentage of captive chimpanzees also showed evidence of influenza A H1N1 infections, and had low levels of H3N2 antibodies, while in sera from gorillas and orangutans antibody levels to influenza A and B viruses were much lower or practically absent. Transmission of respiratory viruses was examined in longitudinal sera of young chimpanzees, and in chimpanzee sera taken during health checks. In young animals isolated cases of influenza infections were monitored, but evidence was found for single introductions followed by a rapid dissemination of RSV and hMPV within the group. Implementation of strict guidelines for handling and housing of nonhuman primates was shown to be an efficient method to reduce the introduction of respiratory infections in colonies of captive animals. RSV seroprevalence rates of chimpanzees remained high, probably due to circulating virus in the chimpanzee colony.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24662675 PMCID: PMC3970160 DOI: 10.3390/v6031442
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Seroprevalence of respiratory viral infections in great apes.
| Virus | gorillas | orangutans | chimpanzees |
|---|---|---|---|
| n = 77 | n = 179 | n = 305 | |
| RSV | 79.3 # (61) | 72.1 (129) | 96.4 (294) |
| hMPV | 46.8 (36) | 10.1 (18) | 42.6 (130) |
| inf A H3N2 | 3.9 (3) | 5.6 (10) | 11.2 (34) |
| inf A H1N1 | 3.9 (3) | 19.0 (34) | 71.5 (218) |
| infl B | 58.4 (45) | 75.4 (135) | 26.2 (80) |
# Seroprevalence in percentages. Absolute numbers are given between brackets.
Longitudinal analysis of respiratory virus infections in a chimpanzee colony.
| Virus | 1986 | 1992 | 1998 | 2000 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| n = 104 | n = 80 | n = 52 | n = 69 | |
| RSV | 84.6 (88) | 100 (80) | 98.1 (51) | 79.7 (55) |
| hMPV | 67.3 (70) | 42.5 (34) | 21.2 (11) | 21.7 (15) |
| inf A H3N2 | 15.4 (16) | 17.5 (14) | 1.9 (1) | 4.3 (3) |
| inf A H1N1 | 81.7 (85) | 90.0 (72) | 46.2 (24) | 53.6 (37) |
| inf B | 51.0 (53) | 15.0 (12) | 7.7 (4) | 15.9 (11) |
Figure 1Serological screening of longitudinal serum samples from 11 juvenile chimpanzees using antigen-coated beads. On the horizontal axis the sampling date (in years) is indicated. On the vertical axis the median fluorescence intensity (MFI) is given for each serum sample assayed against respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) or human metapneumovirus (hMPV) antigens.