Circoviridae Survey in Captive Non-Human Primates, Italy

Author:

Sarchese Vittorio1ORCID,Di Profio Federica1ORCID,Palombieri Andrea1ORCID,Friedrich Klaus Gunther2,Robetto Serena3ORCID,Banyai Krisztian45,Marsilio Fulvio1ORCID,Martella Vito6ORCID,Di Martino Barbara1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Veterinary Medicine, Università degli Studi di Teramo, 64100 Teramo, Italy

2. Fondazione Bioparco, Viale del Giardino Zoologico, 00197 Rome, Italy

3. Istituto Zooprofilattico Sperimentale del Piemonte, della Liguria e della Valle d’Aosta, S.S. Patologie della Fauna Selvatica, 11020 Quart, Italy

4. Institute for Veterinary Medical Research, Centre for Agricultural Research, 1143 Budapest, Hungary

5. Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, University of Veterinary Medicine, 1078 Budapest, Hungary

6. Department of Veterinary Medicine, Università Aldo Moro di Bari, 70010 Valenzano, Italy

Abstract

Circoviruses (CVs) and cycloviruses (CyVs), members of the family Circoviridae, have been identified only occasionally in non-human primates (NHPs). In this study, we investigated the presence and genetic features of these viruses in 48 NHPs housed in the Bioparco—Rome Zoological Garden (Italy) and in the Anima Natura Wild Sanctuary Semproniano (Grosseto, Italy), testing fecal, saliva, and serum samples with a broadly reactive consensus nested PCR able of amplifying a partial region of the replicase (Rep) gene of members of the family Circoviridae. Viral DNA was detected in a total of 10 samples, including a saliva swab and 9 fecal samples collected, respectively from five Japanese macaques (Macaca fuscata) and four mandrills (Mandrillus sphinx), with an overall prevalence of 18.7% (9/48). On genome sequencing, five strains revealed the highest nucleotide identity (98.3–98.6%) to a CyV strain (RI196/ITA) detected in the intestinal content of a Maltese wall lizard (Podarcis filfolensis) in Italy. Although the origin of the Italian NHP strains, genetically distant from previously detected NHP CyVs, is uncertain, our results also highlight that the virome of captive animals is modulated by the different dietary and environmental sources of exposure.

Publisher

MDPI AG

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