Animal Microbiome (Jul 2021)

The genetic diversity of “papillomavirome” in bovine teat papilloma lesions

  • Jéssica Tatiane Sauthier,
  • Cíntia Daudt,
  • Flavio Roberto Chaves da Silva,
  • Christian Diniz Beduschi Travassos Alves,
  • Fabiana Quoos Mayer,
  • Ronaldo Michel Bianchi,
  • David Driemeier,
  • Rodrigo Silva Araujo Streit,
  • Charley Christian Staats,
  • Cláudio Wageck Canal,
  • Matheus Nunes Weber

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s42523-021-00114-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Background Papillomaviruses are small nonenveloped, circular double-stranded DNA viruses that belong to the Papillomaviridae family. To date, 29 Bos taurus papillomavirus (BPV) types have been described. Studies involving mixed BPV infections have rarely been reported in contrast to human papillomavirus (HPV), which is commonly described in numerous studies showing coinfections. Moreover, previous studies had shown that HPV coinfections increase the risk of carcinogenesis. In the present study, we used rolling-circle amplification followed by a high-throughput sequencing (RCA-HTS) approach in 23 teat papillomas from southern Brazil. Results Eleven well-characterized BPV types and 14 putative new BPV types were genetically characterized into the Xi, Epsilon and Dyoxipapillomavirus genera according to phylogenetic analysis of the L1 gene, which expands the previous 29 BPV types to 43. Moreover, BPV coinfections were detected in the majority (56.3%) of the papilloma lesions analyzed, suggesting a genetic diverse “papillomavirome” in bovine teat warts. Conclusions The data generated in this study support the possibility that a wide range of BPV is probably underdetected by conventional molecular detection tools, and that BPV coinfections are underestimated and probably genetic diverse. Additionally, 14 new BPV types were characterized, increasing the knowledge regarding BPV genetic diversity.

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