| Literature DB >> 27290717 |
Chimène Nze Nkogue1,2, Masayuki Horie1,3, Shiho Fujita4, Michiko Ogino5, Yuki Kobayashi6, Keijiro Mizukami7, Tatsunori Masatani1,3, Sayeh Ezzikouri3,8, Aya Matsuu1,3, Tetsuya Mizutani9, Makoto Ozawa1,3, Osamu Yamato7, Alfred Ngomanda2, Juichi Yamagiwa10, Kyoko Tsukiyama-Kohara11,12.
Abstract
Adenoviruses are widespread in human population as well as in great apes, although the data about the naturally occurring adenovirus infections remain rare. We conducted the surveillance of adenovirus infection in wild western lowland gorillas in Moukalaba-Doudou National Park (Gabon), in order to investigate naturally occurring adenovirus in target gorillas and tested specifically a possible zoonotic transmission with local people inhabiting the vicinity of the park. Fecal samples were collected from western lowland gorillas and humans, and analyzed by PCR. We detected adenoviral genes in samples from both gorillas and the local people living around the national park, respectively: the overall prevalence rates of adenovirus were 24.1 and 35.0 % in gorillas and humans, respectively. Sequencing revealed that the adenoviruses detected in the gorillas were members of Human mastadenovirus B (HAdV-B), HAdV-C, or HAdV-E, and those in the humans belonged to HAdV-C or HAdV-D. Although HAdV-C members were detected in both gorillas and humans, phylogenetic analysis revealed that the virus detected in gorillas are genetically distinct from those detected in humans. The HAdV-C constitutes a single host lineage which is compatible with the host-pathogen divergence. However, HAdV-B and HAdV-E are constituted by multiple host lineages. Moreover, there is no evidence of zoonotic transmission thus far. Since the gorilla-to-human transmission of adenovirus has been shown before, the current monitoring should be continued in a broader scale for getting more insights in the natural history of naturally occurring adenoviruses and for the safe management of gorillas' populations.Entities:
Keywords: Adenoviridae; Gabon; Gorillas; Phylogeny
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27290717 PMCID: PMC5002280 DOI: 10.1007/s11262-016-1360-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virus Genes ISSN: 0920-8569 Impact factor: 2.332
Fig. 1Location features of the sampling area. a Map of Gabon, showing Moukalaba-Doudou National Park [21]. b The sampling area in the MDNP (blue line: rivers; black line: roads; red line: hunting area limitation; green line with black strips: national park limitation; dark green: primary forest; olive green: secondary forest; brown: savanna; spotted green: swamp; black circle: sampling points of G8 pointed by an arrow; gray circle pointed by an arrowhead: sampling points of GG; white circle: base camp; black rectangle with a black flag: village; white squares: habitations) (Color figure online)
Detection of adenovirus DPOL and hexon genes in samples from gorilla groups in MDNP
| Gorilla groups | No. of tested samples | No. of positive samples in PCR (%) | HAdV Species | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. of samples | |||||
| B | C | E | |||
| GG | 86 | 26 (30.2 %) | 16 | 9 | 1 |
| G8 | 26 | 1 (3.8 %) | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| Total | 112 | 27 (24.1 %) | 16 | 10 | 1 |
Adenovirus infection in humans
| Sample ID | PCR DPOL | PCR hexon |
|---|---|---|
| H1 | HAdV-C | HAdV-C |
| H2 | HAdV-D | |
| H3 | ||
| H4 | ||
| H5 | ||
| H6 | HAdV-D | |
| H7 | ||
| H8 | HAdV-D | |
| H9 | ||
| H10 | ||
| H11 | HAdV-D | |
| H12 | HAdV-D | |
| H13 | ||
| H14 | ||
| H15 | ||
| H16 | ||
| H17 | HAdV-D | HAdV-D |
| H18 | ||
| H19 | ||
| H20 |
Fig. 2Phylogenetic tree of adenovirus (AdV) DPOL. The tree was constructed based on the alignment of AdV DPOL (539 bp) by using the neighbor-joining bootstrap-confirmed method in MEGA 5.05 software with 100 replicates. The names of simian isolates include the serotype nomenclature and the animal species of isolation (Ch chimpanzee, Go gorilla, Bo bonobo). Names of novel sequences obtained in this study are indicated with black dots. Bootstrap values <90 % are omitted. Scale bar, nucleotide substitutions per site
Fig. 3Phylogenetic tree of the adenovirus hexon gene loop 1 of HAdV-E. The tree was constructed based on the alignment of a 792-bp sequence of the hexon gene by using the neighbor-joining bootstrap-confirmed method in MEGA 5.05 software with 100 replicates. The names of simian isolates include the serotype nomenclature and the animal species of isolation (Ch chimpanzee, Go gorilla Bo bonobo). Names of novel sequences obtained in this study are indicated with black dots