PLoS ONE (Jan 2009)

One more piece in the VACV ecological puzzle: could peridomestic rodents be the link between wildlife and bovine vaccinia outbreaks in Brazil?

  • Jônatas S Abrahão,
  • Maria Isabel M Guedes,
  • Giliane S Trindade,
  • Flávio G Fonseca,
  • Rafael K Campos,
  • Bruno F Mota,
  • Zélia I P Lobato,
  • André T Silva-Fernandes,
  • Gisele O L Rodrigues,
  • Larissa S Lima,
  • Paulo C P Ferreira,
  • Cláudio A Bonjardim,
  • Erna G Kroon

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0007428
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 10
p. e7428

Abstract

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BACKGROUND: Despite the fact that smallpox eradication was declared by the World Health Organization (WHO) in 1980, other poxviruses have emerged and re-emerged, with significant public health and economic impacts. Vaccinia virus (VACV), a poxvirus used during the WHO smallpox vaccination campaign, has been involved in zoonotic infections in Brazilian rural areas (Bovine Vaccinia outbreaks - BV), affecting dairy cattle and milkers. Little is known about VACV's natural hosts and its epidemiological and ecological characteristics. Although VACV was isolated and/or serologically detected in Brazilian wild animals, the link between wildlife and farms has not yet been elucidated. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: In this study, we describe for the first time, to our knowledge, the isolation of a VACV (Mariana virus - MARV) from a mouse during a BV outbreak. Genetic data, in association with biological assays, showed that this isolate was the same etiological agent causing exanthematic lesions observed in the cattle and human inhabitants of a particular BV-affected area. Phylogenetic analysis grouped MARV with other VACV isolated during BV outbreaks. CONCLUSION/SIGNIFICANCE: These data provide new biological and epidemiological information on VACV and lead to an interesting question: could peridomestic rodents be the link between wildlife and BV outbreaks?