Microorganisms (Sep 2020)

Discovery of a Novel Simian Pegivirus in Common Marmosets (<i>Callithrix jacchus</i>) with Lymphocytic Enterocolitis

  • Anna S. Heffron,
  • Michael Lauck,
  • Elizabeth D. Somsen,
  • Elizabeth C. Townsend,
  • Adam L. Bailey,
  • Megan Sosa,
  • Jens Eickhoff,
  • Saverio Capuano III,
  • Christina M. Newman,
  • Jens H. Kuhn,
  • Andres Mejia,
  • Heather A. Simmons,
  • David H. O’Connor

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms8101509
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 10
p. 1509

Abstract

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From 2010 to 2015, 73 common marmosets (Callithrix jacchus) housed at the Wisconsin National Primate Research Center (WNPRC) were diagnosed postmortem with lymphocytic enterocolitis. We used unbiased deep-sequencing to screen the blood of deceased enterocolitis-positive marmosets for viruses. In five out of eight common marmosets with lymphocytic enterocolitis, we discovered a novel pegivirus not present in ten matched, clinically normal controls. The novel virus, which we named Southwest bike trail virus (SOBV), is most closely related (68% nucleotide identity) to a strain of simian pegivirus A isolated from a three-striped night monkey (Aotus trivirgatus). We screened 146 living WNPRC common marmosets for SOBV, finding an overall prevalence of 34% (50/146). Over four years, 85 of these 146 animals died or were euthanized. Histological examination revealed 27 SOBV-positive marmosets from this cohort had lymphocytic enterocolitis, compared to 42 SOBV-negative marmosets, indicating no association between SOBV and disease in this cohort (p = 0.0798). We also detected SOBV in two of 33 (6%) clinically normal marmosets screened during transfer from the New England Primate Research Center, suggesting SOBV could be exerting confounding influences on comparisons of common marmoset studies from multiple colonies.

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