Abstract
ABSTRACTReptarenaviruses cause Boid Inclusion Body Disease (BIBD), a potentially fatal disease, occurring in captive constrictor snakes boas and pythons worldwide. Classical BIBD, characterized by the formation of pathognomonic cytoplasmic inclusion bodies (IBs), occurs mainly in boas, whereas in pythons, for example, reptarenavirus infection most often manifests as central nervous system signs with limited IB formation. The natural hosts of reptarenaviruses are unknown, although wild constrictor snakes are among the suspects. Here, we report BIBD with reptarenavirus infection in indigenous captive and wild boid snakes in Costa Rica using histology, immunohistology, transmission electron microscopy, next-generation sequencing (NGS), and RT-PCR. The snakes studied represented diagnostic post mortem cases of captive and wild caught snakes since 1989. The results from NGS on archival paraffin blocks confirm that reptarenaviruses have been present in wild boa constrictors in Costa Rica already in the 1980s. Continuous sequences de novo assembled from the low-quality RNA obtained from paraffin embedded tissue allowed the identification of a distinct pair of reptrarenavirus S and L segments in all studied animals; in most cases reference assembly could recover almost complete segments. Sampling of three prospective cases in 2018 allowed examination of fresh blood or tissues, and resulted in identification of additional reptarenavirus segments and hartmanivirus co-infection. Our results show that BIBD is not only a disease of captive snakes, but also occurs in indigenous wild constrictor snakes in Costa Rica, suggesting boa constrictors to play a role in natural reptarenavirus circulation.IMPORTANCEThe literature describes cases of boid inclusion body disease (BIBD) in captive snakes since the 1970s, and in the 2010s, others and we identified reptarenaviruses as the causative agent. BIBD affects captive snakes globally, but the origin and the natural host of reptarenaviruses remains unknown. In this report, we show BIBD and reptarenavirus infections in two native Costa Rican constrictor snake species, and by studying archival samples, we show that both the viruses and the disease have been present in wild snakes in Costa Rica at least since the 1980s. The diagnosis of BIBD in wild boa constrictors suggests that this species plays a role in the circulation of reptarenaviruses. Additional sample collection and analysis would help to clarify this role further and the possibility of e.g. vector transmission from an arthropod host.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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