| Literature DB >> 34689822 |
Mason C Jager1, Joy E Tomlinson1, Robert A Lopez-Astacio1, Colin R Parrish1, Gerlinde R Van de Walle2.
Abstract
In line with the Latin expression "sed parva forti" meaning "small but mighty," the family Parvoviridae contains many of the smallest known viruses, some of which result in fatal or debilitating infections. In recent years, advances in metagenomic viral discovery techniques have dramatically increased the identification of novel parvoviruses in both diseased and healthy individuals. While some of these discoveries have solved etiologic mysteries of well-described diseases in animals, many of the newly discovered parvoviruses appear to cause mild or no disease, or disease associations remain to be established. With the increased use of animal parvoviruses as vectors for gene therapy and oncolytic treatments in humans, it becomes all the more important to understand the diversity, pathogenic potential, and evolution of this diverse family of viruses. In this review, we discuss parvoviruses infecting vertebrate animals, with a special focus on pathogens of veterinary significance and viruses discovered within the last four years.Entities:
Keywords: Amdoparvovirus; Animal parvoviruses; Chaphamaparvovirus; Copiparvovirus; Pathogenicity; Viral metagenomics; Viral therapeutics
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34689822 PMCID: PMC8542416 DOI: 10.1186/s12985-021-01677-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virol J ISSN: 1743-422X Impact factor: 4.099
Fig. 1Number of animal parvoviruses discovery by year. Graph showing the number of new ICTV-recognized non-human, vertebrate animal parvoviruses [20] discovered between 1958 and 2019. Viruses discovered since 2019 have not been consistently added to the ICTV taxonomy and are, thus, excluded. Note the marked increase in viral discovery in the last 20 years due to the use of metagenomics and high-throughput sequencing
Summary of vertebrate animal parvoviruses by genus and species. Vertebrate animal parvoviruses from the ten genera of subfamily Parvovirinae and the genus Chaphamaparvovirus of subfamily Hamaparvovirinae are listed alphabetically by species, as proposed by the ICTV [20]
| Genus | Species | Virus name | Abbrev | Tissue source | Age affected | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aleutian mink disease parvovirus | ADV | Tissue | Young/adult | [ | ||
| Gray fox parvovirus | GFAV | S, Lu | Unknown | [ | ||
| Racoon dog and fox amdoparvovirus | RFAV | S, K, MLN, blood | Young | [ | ||
| Skunk amdoparvovirus | SKAV | Tissue | Young/adult | [ | ||
| Red panda amdoparvovirus | RpAPV | S, Li, Lu, K, SI, feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| NA | LaAV-1 | S, LN, muscle | Unknown | [ | ||
| NA | LaAV-2 | S, LN, muscle | Unknown | [ | ||
| Artibeus jamaicensis parvovirus | Aj-BtPV-1 | Blood | Unknown | [ | ||
| Pigeon parvovirus 1 | PiPV1 | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
Turkey parvovirus Chicken parvovirus | TuPV ChPV | I | Unknown | [ | ||
| Red-crowned crane parvovirus | RcPV | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| Minute virus of canines | MVC | Feces | Young | [ | ||
| Canine bocavirus 2 | CBoV2 | Respiratory | Unknown | [ | ||
| NA | Canine bocavirus 3 | CBoV3 | Li | Unknown | [ | |
| Feline bocavirus 1 | FBoV1 | Feces, blood, K, nasal swabs | Unknown | 144[] | ||
| Feline bocaparvovirus 2 | FboV2 | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| Feline bocaparvovirus 3 | FBoV3 | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| Mink bocavirus 1 | MiBoV1 | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| Myotis myotis (bat) bocavirus 1 | BtBoV1 | Pharyngeal and anal swabs | Unknown | [ | ||
| Bat bocavirus WM40 | BtBoVwm40 | Tissue | Unknown | [ | ||
| Bat bocavirus XM30 | BtBoVxm30 | Tissue | Unknown | [ | ||
| Miniopterus schreibersii bat bocavirus | BtBoV2 | S, Lu, I | Unknown | [ | ||
| Rousettus leschenaultii bocaparvovirus 1 | RlBoV | S, Li, I | Unknown | [ | ||
| Rabbit bocaparvovirus | RBoV | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| California sea lion bocavirus 1 | CslBoV1 | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| California sea lion bocavirus 3 | CslBoV3 | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| Human bocavirus 1 and 3 | HBoV1, 3 | Respiratory | Young | [ | ||
| Human bocavirus 2 and 4 | HBoV2, 4 | Stool | Unknown | [ | ||
| Macca mulatta bocaparvovirus | MmBoV | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| Rat bocavirus | RBoV | Lu, I, S, K | Unknown | [ | ||
| Murine bocavirus | MuBoV | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| Bovine parvovirus 1 | BPV1 | I | Young | [ | ||
| Porcine bocavirus 1 | PBoV1 | LN | Unknown | [ | ||
| Porcine bocavirus SX | PBoVsx | Serum | Unknown | [ | ||
| Porcine bocavirus H18 | PBoVh18 | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| Porcine bocavirus 3 | PBoV3 | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| Bovine bocaparvovirus 2 | BBoV2 | Nasal swab | Unknown | [ | ||
| Dromedary camel bocaparvovirus 1 | DBoV1 | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| Dromedary camel bocaparvovirus 2 | DBoV2 | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| Vicugna pacos bocaparvovirus | VpBoV | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| Sesavirus | SesaV | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| Bovine parvovirus 2 | BPV2 | Serum | Unknown | [ | ||
| Porcine parvovirus 4 | PPV4 | Lu lavage | Unknown | [ | ||
| Roe deer copiparvovirus | RdPV | Unknown | [ | |||
| Porcine parvovirus 6 | PPV6 | Fetus | Unknown | [ | ||
| Bosavirus | BosaV | Serum | Unknown | [ | ||
| Equine parvovirus-hepatitis | EqPV-H | Li, serum | Adult | [ | ||
| NA | Equine parvovirus-CSF | EqPV-CSF | CSF | Unknown | [ | |
| NA | Equine copiparvovirus | EqCoPV | Plasma | Unknown | [ | |
| NA | Sheep copiparvovirus | Sheep PV | Serum | Unknown | [ | |
| Adeno-associated virus 1, 2, 3, 4 | AAV1-4 | Cell culture | Unknown | [ | ||
| Adeno-associated virus 5 | AAV5 | Cell culture | Unknown | [ | ||
Goose parvovirus Muscovy duck parvovirus Novel goose parvovirus | GPV MDPV nGPV | Tissue Tissue Li, S, heart | Young Young Young | [ [ [ | ||
| Avian adeno-associated virus | AAAV | Respiratory | Unknown | [ | ||
| Feline dependoparvovirus | FdPV | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| Bat adeno-associated virus | BtAAV | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| California sea lion adeno-associated virus 1 | CslAAV1 | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| Murine adeno-associated virus 1 | MAAV1 | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| Murine adeno-associated virus 2 | MAAV2 | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| Snake adeno-associated virus | SAAV | Heart, S, Li, K | Unknown | [ | ||
| Bearded dragon parvovirus | BDPV | Lu, Li, I, K, gonads | Unknown | [ | ||
| Seal parvovirus | SePV | Brain | Unknown | [ | ||
| Human parvovirus B19 | B19V | Serum | Young/Adult | [ | ||
| Simian parvovirus | SPV | Serum | Young/Adult | [ | ||
| Rhesus macaque parvovirus | RmPV | Serum | Unknown | [ | ||
| Pig-tailed macaque parvovirus | PmPV | Serum | Unknown | [ | ||
| Chipmunk parvovirus | ChpPV | Serum | Unknown | [ | ||
| Bovine parvovirus 3 | BPV3 | Serum | Unknown | [ | ||
| Slow loris parvovirus 1 | Sl.L-PV-1 | I, Li, K, Lu, Serum | Unknown | [ | ||
Canine parvovirus Feline panleukopenia virus | CPV-2 FPV | Feces S | Young Young | [ [ | ||
| Sea otter parvovirus | SoPV | MLN, Li, Lu, S | Unknown | [ | ||
| Canine bufavirus | CBuV | Feces, NP swabs | Unknown | [ | ||
| Fox parvovirus | FoPV | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| Megabat bufavirus 1 | BtBuV1 | S, feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| Mpulungu (shrew]bufavirus | MpBuV | S, feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| Bufavirus | BuV | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| Wuharv (rhesus) parvovirus 1 | WuBuV1 | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| Cutavirus | CutaV | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| Tusavirus | TuV | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| Minute virus of mice | MVM | Serum | Young | [ | ||
| Rat parvovirus 1 | RPV1 | Tumor | Young | [ | ||
| Rat bufavirus SY-2015 | RatBuV | I content | Unknown | [ | ||
| Porcine parvovirus | PPV | Fetal tissues | Young | [ | ||
Porcine bufavirus protoparvovirus [porcine) | PBuV | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| Eidolon helvum (bat) parvovirus 1 | BtPARV4 | Blood | Unknown | [ | ||
| Human parvovirus 4 | PARV4 | Plasma | Unknown | [ | ||
| Bovine hokovirus 1 | BPARV4 | S | Unknown | [ | ||
| Porcine hokovirus/Porcine parvovirus 3 | PPARV4/PPV3 | LN, Li, serum, feces | Unknown | [ | ||
Porcine parvovirus 2 Parvovirus YX-2010/CHN | PPV2 | Serum | Unknown | [ | ||
| Ovine hokovirus 1 | OvPARV4 | Li, S | Unknown | [ | ||
| Cachavirus 1 and 2 | CachaV-1 | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| Fechavirus | FChPV | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| Desmodus rotundus chapparvovirus | DrPV-1 | K | Unknown | [ | ||
| Tasmanian devil-associated chapparvovirus 1,2, and 6 | TdChPV | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| Turkey parvovirus 2 | TPV2 | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| Chicken chapparvovirus 2 | ChikPV2 | I | Unknown | [ | ||
| Chicken chapparvovirus HK | [ | |||||
| Peafowl parvovirus 1 | PePV1 | Li, I, heart, stomach | Unknown | [ | ||
| Peafowl parvovirus 2 | PePV2 | Li, I, heart, stomach | Unknown | [ | ||
| Capuchin kidney parvovirus | CKPV | K | Unkown | [ | ||
| Psittacara leucophthalmus chapparvovirus | PlChPV | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
Mouse kidney parvovirus Murine chapparvovirus | MKPV MuCPV | K | Unknown | [ [ | ||
| Rat parvovirus 2 | RPV2 | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| Porcine parvovirus 7 | PPV7 | Feces | Unknown | [ | ||
| NA | Tilapia parvovirus | TiPV | Feces | Adult | [ | |
| NA | Duck associated chapparvovirus | DAC | Oropharyn-geal and cloacal swabs | Unknown | [ |
Abbreviations are those defined by the ICTV or based on the literature. References are of peer-reviewed literature describing either the first detection or first full genome sequence of a virus as recognized by the ICTV
NA Not assigned by ICTV up to 2020 [20], S Spleen, Lu Lung, K Kidney, MLN Mesenteric lymph node, Li Liver, SI Small intestine, I Intestine, LN Lymph node, CSF Cerebrospinal fluid, NP Nasopharyngeal
Fig. 2Vertebrate animal Parvovirus Classification and Pathogenicity. A graphical representation of known pathogenicity of select vertebrate animal parvoviruses including all ten genera of the subfamily Parvovirinae and one genus of Hamaparvovirinae. Viruses marked as both non-pathogenic and pathogenic may have certain conditions, i.e. immunosuppressed host, where the virus is pathogenic. Potentially pathogenic viruses include those where viral nucleic acid has been demonstrated in tissues of a diseased animal or experimental infection has produced disease, but modern Koch’s postulates have not been fully satisfied
Fig. 3Genome structures of partial or complete coding sequences of recently identified vertebrate parvoviruses. Included are red panda parvovirus (RpAPV) (NC_031751), equine parvovirus-hepatitis (EqPV-H) (MG136722), mouse kidney parvovirus (MKPV) (MH670587), and tilapia parvovirus (TiPV) (MT393593). The genome length known to date, with partial or complete inverted terminal repeats (ITRs), are below the virus name. The colored boxes represent the open reading frames (ORFs) of the non-structural (NS), viral protein (VP), or accessory viral proteins encoded in the genome
Current knowledge on recent parvoviruses of veterinary importance based on Koch’s revisited postulates
| I: genome sequence in most cases of infectious disease | II: fewer/no genome copies in hosts/tissue without disease | III: copy number decreases with disease resolution | IV: sequence detection prior to disease or copy number correlates with severity | V: virus phenotype is consistent with known biological characteristics of its group | VI: in situ hybridization detection of genome copies in tissues with pathology | VII: genome sequence-based evidence is experimentally reproducible | Total number of criteria addressed | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Skunk amdoparvo-virus (SKAV) | NA | NA | NA | 4 | ||||
| Red panda amdoparvo-virus (RpAPV) | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | 2 | ||
| Feline bocaviruses (FBoV1-3) | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | 2 | ||
| Canine bocavirus 2 (CBoV2) | NA | NA | NA | 4 | ||||
| Equine parvovirus-hepatitis (EqPV-H) | 6 | |||||||
| Seal parvovirus (SePV) | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | 1 | ||
| Porcine parvovirus 2 (PPV2) | NA | NA | NA | NA | 2 | |||
| Mouse kidney parvovirus (MKPV) | NA | 6 | ||||||
| Tilapia parvovirus (TiPV) | NA | 6 |
The seven revisited criteria, adapted from Fredericks and Relman [13], are shown. Evaluation of evidence for pathogenicity was based on total number of criteria addressed for each virus and classified as weak (score 1–2), moderate (score 3–5), or strong (score 6–7)
NA not assessed yet/not feasible/not applicable
Fig. 4Summary of parvovirus replication requirements. (1) Most autonomous parvoviruses require mitotically active cells (S/G2 phase) to provide host replication factors to replicate their viral genome. (2) Recently, human bocavirus 1 (HBoV1) was demonstrated to replicate in non-dividing airway epithelial cells through hijacking of DNA repair machinery [33, 34]. (3) Dependoparvoviruses depend on co-infection with a helper virus to undergo productive replication in a host cell