Molini Umberto, Franzo Giovanni, Settypalli Tirumala B K, Hemberger Maria Y, Khaiseb Siegfried, Cattoli Giovanni, Dundon William G, Lamien Charles E
School of Veterinary Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences and Veterinary Medicine, University of Namibia, Neudamm Campus, Private Bag 13301, Windhoek 9000, Namibia.
Central Veterinary Laboratory (CVL), 24 Goethe Street, Private Bag 18137, Windhoek 9000, Namibia.
Animals (Basel). 2022 Jun 30;12(13):1697. doi: 10.3390/ani12131697.
Understanding virus circulation in wild animals, particularly those that have contact with domestic animals, is crucial for disease management and control. In Africa, warthogs are known to be asymptomatic carriers of porcine pathogens; a recent study in Namibia has shown them to be positive for Porcine circovirus-2 (PCV-2). In this study, the same samples used for the PCV-2 investigation in Namibia were further screened for the presence of African swine fever virus (ASFV) and porcine parvovirus 1 (PPV1) by PCR. Of the 42 animals tested, 2 (4.8%) and 13 (31%) were positive for AFSV and PPV1, respectively. The two AFSV were also co-infected with PPV1. Combing the results of this study with the results of the previous PCV-2 investigation, four warthogs were shown to be co-infected with both PPV1 and PCV-2. Sequence and phylogenetic analysis revealed that the AFSV belonged to genotype (Ib) but were from different serogroups. Unexpectedly, the ASFVs from the warthogs were genetically distinct to those observed in an outbreak in the same region of Namibia that occurred less than fifteen months prior to the sampling of the warthogs. In fact, a stronger genetic relationship was observed between the warthog viruses and historical Namibian and South African ASFVs identified in 1980, 2004 and 2008. For the PPV1s, the closest relative to the Namibian PPV1 were viruses identified in wild boar in Romania in 2011. This study confirms that warthogs are carriers of porcine pathogens and the data should encourage further studies on larger populations of wild and domestic swine to more fully understand the epidemiology and transmission of viral pathogens from these species.
了解野生动物,尤其是那些与家畜有接触的野生动物中的病毒传播情况,对于疾病管理和控制至关重要。在非洲,已知疣猪是猪病原体的无症状携带者;纳米比亚最近的一项研究表明,它们的猪圆环病毒2型(PCV - 2)检测呈阳性。在本研究中,对纳米比亚用于PCV - 2调查的相同样本,通过聚合酶链反应(PCR)进一步筛查非洲猪瘟病毒(ASFV)和猪细小病毒1型(PPV1)的存在情况。在检测的42只动物中,ASFV和PPV1呈阳性的分别有2只(4.8%)和13只(31%)。这两只感染ASFV的动物也同时感染了PPV1。将本研究结果与之前PCV - 2调查结果相结合,发现有4只疣猪同时感染了PPV1和PCV - 2。序列和系统发育分析表明,ASFV属于基因型(Ib),但来自不同血清型。出乎意料的是,疣猪身上的ASFV在基因上与在疣猪采样前不到15个月于纳米比亚同一地区爆发的疫情中观察到的病毒不同。事实上,在疣猪病毒与1980年、2004年和2008年在纳米比亚和南非鉴定出的历史ASFV之间观察到了更强的基因关系。对于PPV1,与纳米比亚PPV1亲缘关系最近的是2011年在罗马尼亚野猪中鉴定出的病毒。本研究证实疣猪是猪病原体的携带者,这些数据应促使对更多野生和家猪群体进行进一步研究,以更全面地了解这些物种中病毒病原体的流行病学和传播情况。