Emerging Infectious Diseases (Sep 2008)

Circulation of 3 Lineages of a Novel Saffold Cardiovirus in Humans

  • Ana Maria Bispo de Filippis,
  • Luciano Kleber de Souza Luna,
  • Andreas Stöcker,
  • Patrícia Silva Almeida,
  • Tereza Cristina Medrado Ribeiro,
  • Nadine Petersen,
  • Petra Herzog,
  • Célia Pedroso,
  • Hans Iko Huppertz,
  • Hugo da Costa Ribeiro,
  • Sigrid Baumgarte,
  • Sung Sup Park

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1409.080570
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 9
pp. 1398 – 1405

Abstract

Read online

Cardioviruses cause serious disease, mainly in rodents, including diabetes, myocarditis, encephalomyelitis, and multiple sclerosis–like disseminated encephalomyelitis. Recently, a human virus isolate obtained 25 years ago, termed Saffold virus, was sequenced and classified as a cardiovirus. We conducted systematic molecular screening for Saffold-like viruses in 844 fecal samples from patients with gastroenteritis from Germany and Brazil, across all age groups. Six cardioviruses were identified in patients <6 years of age. Viral loads were 283,305–5,044,412,175 copies/g of stool. Co-infections occurred in 4 of 6 children. No evidence for outbreak-like epidemic patterns was found. Phylogenetic analysis identified 3 distinct genetic lineages. Viral protein 1 amino acids were 67.9%–77.7% identical and had a distance of at least 39.4% from known cardioviruses. Because closely related strains were found on 2 continents, global distribution in humans is suspected. Saffold-like viruses may be the first human cardiovirus species to be identified.

Keywords