Li Yan, Khalafalla Abdelmalik Ibrahim, Paden Clinton R, Yusof Mohammed F, Eltahir Yassir M, Al Hammadi Zulaikha M, Tao Ying, Queen Krista, Hosani Farida Al, Gerber Susan I, Hall Aron J, Al Muhairi Salama, Tong Suxiang
Division of Viral Diseases, National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, United States of America.
Animal Wealth Sector, Abu Dhabi Food Control Authority, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates.
PLoS One. 2017 Sep 13;12(9):e0184718. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0184718. eCollection 2017.
Camels are known carriers for many viral pathogens, including Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV). It is likely that there are additional, as yet unidentified viruses in camels with the potential to cause disease in humans. In this study, we performed metagenomic sequencing analysis on nasopharyngeal swab samples from 108 MERS-CoV-positive dromedary camels from a live animal market in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. We obtained a total of 846.72 million high-quality reads from these nasopharyngeal swab samples, of which 2.88 million (0.34%) were related to viral sequences while 512.63 million (60.5%) and 50.87 million (6%) matched bacterial and eukaryotic sequences, respectively. Among the viral reads, sequences related to mammalian viruses from 13 genera in 10 viral families were identified, including Coronaviridae, Nairoviridae, Paramyxoviridae, Parvoviridae, Polyomaviridae, Papillomaviridae, Astroviridae, Picornaviridae, Poxviridae, and Genomoviridae. Some viral sequences belong to known camel or human viruses and others are from potentially novel camel viruses with only limited sequence similarity to virus sequences in GenBank. A total of five potentially novel virus species or strains were identified. Co-infection of at least two recently identified camel coronaviruses was detected in 92.6% of the camels in the study. This study provides a comprehensive survey of viruses in the virome of upper respiratory samples in camels that have extensive contact with the human population.
骆驼是多种病毒病原体的已知宿主,包括中东呼吸综合征冠状病毒(MERS-CoV)。骆驼体内很可能还存在其他尚未被识别的病毒,有可能导致人类患病。在本研究中,我们对来自阿拉伯联合酋长国阿布扎比一个活畜市场的108只MERS-CoV阳性单峰骆驼的鼻咽拭子样本进行了宏基因组测序分析。我们从这些鼻咽拭子样本中总共获得了8.4672亿条高质量读数,其中288万条(0.34%)与病毒序列相关,而5.1263亿条(60.5%)和5087万条(6%)分别与细菌和真核生物序列匹配。在病毒读数中,鉴定出了与10个病毒科13个属的哺乳动物病毒相关的序列,包括冠状病毒科、内罗病毒科、副粘病毒科、细小病毒科、多瘤病毒科、乳头瘤病毒科、星状病毒科、小RNA病毒科、痘病毒科和基因组病毒科。一些病毒序列属于已知的骆驼或人类病毒,其他则来自潜在的新型骆驼病毒,与GenBank中的病毒序列只有有限的序列相似性。总共鉴定出了五种潜在的新型病毒物种或毒株。在该研究中,92.6%的骆驼中检测到至少两种最近鉴定出的骆驼冠状病毒的共同感染。这项研究全面调查了与人类有广泛接触的骆驼上呼吸道样本病毒组中的病毒。