Emerging Infectious Diseases (Feb 2009)

Simian T-Lymphotropic Virus Diversity among Nonhuman Primates, Cameroon

  • David M. Sintasath,
  • Nathan D. Wolfe,
  • Matthew LeBreton,
  • Hongwei Jia,
  • Albert D. Garcia,
  • Joseph Le Doux Diffo,
  • Ubald Tamoufe,
  • Jean K. Carr,
  • Thomas M. Folks,
  • Eitel Mpoudi-Ngole,
  • Donald S. Burke,
  • Walid Heneine,
  • William M. Switzer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1502.080584
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 2
pp. 175 – 184

Abstract

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Cross-species transmission of retroviruses is common in Cameroon. To determine risk for simian T-cell lymphotropic virus (STLV) transmission from nonhuman primates to hunters, we examined 170 hunter-collected dried blood spots (DBS) from 12 species for STLV. PCR with generic tax and group-specific long terminal repeat primers showed that 12 (7%) specimens from 4 nonhuman primate species were infected with STLV. Phylogenetic analyses showed broad diversity of STLV, including novel STLV-1 and STLV-3 sequences and a highly divergent STLV-3 subtype found in Cercopithecus mona and C. nictitans monkeys. Screening of peripheral blood mononuclear cell DNA from 63 HTLV-seroreactive, PCR-negative hunters did not identify human infections with this divergent STLV-3. Therefore, hunter-collected DBS can effectively capture STLV diversity at the point where pathogen spillover occurs. Broad screening using this relatively easy collection strategy has potential for large-scale monitoring of retrovirus cross-species transmission among highly exposed human populations.

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