Novel Adenoviruses in Wild Primates: a High Level of Genetic Diversity and Evidence of Zoonotic Transmissions

Diana Wevers(Robert Koch Institute), Sonja Metzger(Robert Koch Institute), Fred Babweteera, Marc Bieberbach(Robert Koch Institute), Christophe Boesch(Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology), Kenneth Neill Cameron(Wildlife Conservation Society Congo), Emmanuel Couacy‐Hymann(Laboratoire National d'Appui au Développement Agricole), Mike Cranfield(Gorilla Doctors), Maryke Gray(International Gorilla Conservation Programme), Laurie A. Harris(University of California, Davis), Josephine Head(Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology), Kathryn J. Jeffery(University of Stirling), Sascha Knauf(German Primate Center), Felix Lankester(Lincoln Park Zoo), Siv Aina J. Leendertz(Robert Koch Institute), Elizabeth V. Lonsdorf(Lincoln Park Zoo), Lawrence Mugisha(Makerere University), Andreas Nitsche(Robert Koch Institute), Patricia Reed(Wildlife Conservation Society Congo), Martha M. Robbins(Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology), Dominic A. Travis(University of Minnesota), Zinta Zommers(University of Oxford), Fabian H. Leendertz(Robert Koch Institute), Bernhard Ehlers(Robert Koch Institute)
Journal of Virology
August 11, 2011
Cited by 107Open Access
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Abstract

Adenoviruses (AdVs) broadly infect vertebrate hosts, including a variety of nonhuman primates (NHPs). In the present study, we identified AdVs in NHPs living in their natural habitats, and through the combination of phylogenetic analyses and information on the habitats and epidemiological settings, we detected possible horizontal transmission events between NHPs and humans. Wild NHPs were analyzed with a pan-primate AdV-specific PCR using a degenerate nested primer set that targets the highly conserved adenovirus DNA polymerase gene. A plethora of novel AdV sequences were identified, representing at least 45 distinct AdVs. From the AdV-positive individuals, 29 nearly complete hexon genes were amplified and, based on phylogenetic analysis, tentatively allocated to all known human AdV species (Human adenovirus A to Human adenovirus G [HAdV-A to -G]) as well as to the only simian AdV species (Simian adenovirus A [SAdV-A]). Interestingly, five of the AdVs detected in great apes grouped into the HAdV-A, HAdV-D, HAdV-F, or SAdV-A clade. Furthermore, we report the first detection of AdVs in New World monkeys, clustering at the base of the primate AdV evolutionary tree. Most notably, six chimpanzee AdVs of species HAdV-A to HAdV-F revealed a remarkably close relationship to human AdVs, possibly indicating recent interspecies transmission events.


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