Emerging Infectious Diseases (Feb 2024)

Piscichuvirus-Associated Severe Meningoencephalomyelitis in Aquatic Turtles, United States, 2009–2021

  • Weerapong Laovechprasit,
  • Kelsey T. Young,
  • Brian A. Stacy,
  • Steven B. Tillis,
  • Robert J. Ossiboff,
  • Jordan A. Vann,
  • Kuttichantran Subramaniam,
  • Dalen W. Agnew,
  • Elizabeth W. Howerth,
  • Jian Zhang,
  • Shayna Whitaker,
  • Alicia Walker,
  • Andrew M. Orgill,
  • Lyndsey N. Howell,
  • Donna J. Shaver,
  • Kyle Donnelly,
  • Allen M. Foley,
  • James B. Stanton

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid3002.231142
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30, no. 2
pp. 280 – 288

Abstract

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Viruses from a new species of piscichuvirus were strongly associated with severe lymphocytic meningoencephalomyelitis in several free-ranging aquatic turtles from 3 coastal US states during 2009–2021. Sequencing identified 2 variants (freshwater turtle neural virus 1 [FTuNV1] and sea turtle neural virus 1 [STuNV1]) of the new piscichuvirus species in 3 turtles of 3 species. In situ hybridization localized viral mRNA to the inflamed region of the central nervous system in all 3 sequenced isolates and in 2 of 3 additional nonsequenced isolates. All 3 sequenced isolates phylogenetically clustered with other vertebrate chuvirids within the genus Piscichuvirus. FTuNV1 and STuNV1 shared ≈92% pairwise amino acid identity of the large protein, which narrowly places them within the same novel species. The in situ association of the piscichuviruses in 5 of 6 turtles (representing 3 genera) with lymphocytic meningoencephalomyelitis suggests that piscichuviruses are a likely cause of lymphocytic meningoencephalomyelitis in freshwater and marine turtles.

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