Gorilla Doctors, Karen C. Drayer Wildlife Health Center, One Health Institute, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California Davis, Davis, California, USA.
Department of Pathology, Microbiology and Immunology, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California Davis, Davis, California, USA.
Am J Primatol. 2023 Jan;85(1):e23439. doi: 10.1002/ajp.23439. Epub 2022 Oct 19.
The endangered mountain gorilla (Gorilla beringei beringei) in Rwanda, Uganda, and the Democratic Republic of Congo is frequently in contact with humans through tourism, research activities, and illegal entry of people into protected gorilla habitat. Herpesviruses, which are ubiquitous in primates, have the potential to be shared in any setting where humans and gorillas share habitat. Based on serological findings and clinical observations of orofacial ulcerated lesions resembling herpetic lesions, an alpha-herpesvirus resembling human herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) has long been suspected to be present in human-habituated mountain gorillas in the wild. While the etiology of orofacial lesions in the wild has not been confirmed, HSV-1 has been suspected in captively-housed mountain gorillas and confirmed in a co-housed confiscated Grauer's gorilla (Gorilla beringei graueri). To better characterize herpesviruses infecting mountain gorillas and to determine the presence/absence of HSV-1 in the free-living population, we conducted a population-wide survey to test for the presence of orally shed herpesviruses. DNA was extracted from discarded chewed plants collected from 294 individuals from 26 groups, and samples were screened by polymerase chain reaction using pan-herpesvirus and HSV-1-specific assays. We found no evidence that human herpesviruses had infected free-ranging mountain gorillas. However, we found gorilla-specific homologs to human herpesviruses, including cytomegaloviruses (GbbCMV-1 and 2), a lymphocryptovirus (GbbLCV-1), and a new rhadinovirus (GbbRHV-1) with similar characteristics (i.e., timing of primary infection, shedding in multiple age groups, and potential modes of transmission) to their human counterparts, human cytomegalovirus, Epstein-Barr virus and Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus, respectively.
卢旺达、乌干达和刚果民主共和国的濒危山地大猩猩(Gorilla beringei beringei)经常通过旅游、研究活动以及人类非法进入受保护的大猩猩栖息地与人类接触。在任何人类和大猩猩共同栖息的环境中,普遍存在的疱疹病毒都有可能传播。基于血清学发现和类似疱疹病变的口腔溃疡性病变的临床观察,一种类似于人类单纯疱疹病毒 1 型(HSV-1)的α疱疹病毒长期以来一直被怀疑存在于野生人类驯化的山地大猩猩中。虽然野外口腔病变的病因尚未得到证实,但已怀疑在圈养的山地大猩猩中存在 HSV-1,并在共同饲养的没收的格雷氏大猩猩(Gorilla beringei graueri)中得到证实。为了更好地描述感染山地大猩猩的疱疹病毒,并确定自由放养种群中是否存在 HSV-1,我们进行了一项全人群调查,以检测口腔脱落疱疹病毒的存在。从 26 个群组的 294 只个体收集的丢弃的咀嚼植物中提取 DNA,并通过聚合酶链反应使用泛疱疹病毒和 HSV-1 特异性检测法对样本进行筛选。我们没有发现人类疱疹病毒感染野生山地大猩猩的证据。然而,我们发现了与人类疱疹病毒具有同源性的大猩猩特异性病毒,包括巨细胞病毒(GbbCMV-1 和 2)、淋巴隐病毒(GbbLCV-1)和一种新的疱疹病毒(GbbRHV-1),它们具有与人类巨细胞病毒、EB 病毒和卡波西肉瘤相关的疱疹病毒相似的特征(即原发性感染的时间、在多个年龄组中脱落以及潜在的传播方式)。