OIE Collaborating Centre for Diseases at the Animal-Human Interface, Research & Innovation Department, Division of Biomedical Science, Istituto Zooprofilattico Sperimentale delle Venezie, Legnaro, Italy.
Infect Genet Evol. 2011 Oct;11(7):1529-44. doi: 10.1016/j.meegid.2011.07.024. Epub 2011 Aug 5.
Astroviruses are small, non-enveloped, positive sense, single-stranded RNA viruses first identified in 1975 in children suffering from diarrhea and then described in a wide variety of animals. To date, the list of animal species susceptible to astrovirus infection has expanded to 22 animal species or families, including domestic, synantropic and wild animals, avian, and mammalian species in the terrestrial and aquatic environments. Astrovirus infections are considered among the most common cause of gastroenteritis in children, second only to rotavirus infections, but in animals their association with enteric diseases is not well documented, with the exception of turkey and mink astrovirus infection. Genetic variability has been described in almost all astrovirus species sufficiently examined infecting mammals and birds; however, antigenic variability has been demonstrated for human astroviruses but is far less investigated in animal viruses. Interestingly, there is an increasing evidence of recombination events occurring in astroviruses, which contributes to increase the genetic variability of this group of viruses. A wide variety of species infected, the evident virus genetic diversity and the occurrence of recombination events indicate or imply either cross-species transmission and subsequent virus adaptation to new hosts or the co-infection of the same host with different astroviruses. This can also favor the emergence of novel astroviruses infecting animals or with a zoonotic potential. After more than 30 years from their first description in humans, there are many exciting streams of research to be explored and intriguing questions that remain to be answered about the relatively under-studied Astroviridae family. In the present work, we will review the existing knowledge concerning astrovirus infections in humans and animals, with particular focus on the molecular biology, interspecies transmission and zoonotic potential of this group of viruses.
星状病毒是小型、无包膜、正链、单链 RNA 病毒,于 1975 年首次在腹泻患儿中发现,随后在多种动物中被描述。迄今为止,易感染星状病毒的动物种类名单已扩大到 22 个动物物种或科,包括家养动物、共生动物和野生动物、禽和哺乳动物,分布在陆地和水生环境中。星状病毒感染被认为是儿童胃肠炎最常见的原因之一,仅次于轮状病毒感染,但在动物中,其与肠道疾病的关联尚未得到很好的记录,除了火鸡和貂星状病毒感染。几乎所有经过充分检查感染哺乳动物和鸟类的星状病毒种都已描述了遗传变异性;然而,已证明人类星状病毒具有抗原变异性,但在动物病毒中研究得较少。有趣的是,星状病毒中发生重组事件的证据越来越多,这有助于增加这群病毒的遗传变异性。广泛的感染物种、明显的病毒遗传多样性和重组事件的发生表明或暗示了跨种传播和随后的病毒适应新宿主,或者同一宿主同时感染不同的星状病毒。这也有利于新的感染动物或具有人畜共患潜力的星状病毒的出现。自首次在人类中描述以来已经超过 30 年,对于相对研究较少的星状病毒科,有许多令人兴奋的研究方向有待探索,也有许多有趣的问题有待解答。在本工作中,我们将回顾有关人类和动物星状病毒感染的现有知识,特别关注该组病毒的分子生物学、种间传播和人畜共患潜力。