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Isolation and Characterization of Adenoviruses Persistently Shed from the Gastrointestinal Tract of Non-Human Primates

机译:持久地从非人类灵长类动物的胃肠道脱落的腺病毒的分离和鉴定

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摘要

Adenoviruses are important human pathogens that have been developed as vectors for gene therapies and genetic vaccines. Previous studies indicated that human infections with adenoviruses are self-limiting in immunocompetent hosts with evidence of some persistence in adenoid tissue. We sought to better understand the natural history of adenovirus infections in various non-human primates and discovered that healthy populations of great apes (chimpanzees, bonobos, gorillas, and orangutans) and macaques shed substantial quantities of infectious adenoviruses in stool. Shedding in stools from asymptomatic humans was found to be much less frequent, comparable to frequencies reported before. We purified and fully sequenced 30 novel adenoviruses from apes and 3 novel adenoviruses from macaques. Analyses of the new ape adenovirus sequences (as well as the 4 chimpanzee adenovirus sequences we have previously reported) together with 22 complete adenovirus genomes available from GenBank revealed that (a) the ape adenoviruses could clearly be classified into species corresponding to human adenovirus species B, C, and E, (b) there was evidence for intraspecies recombination between adenoviruses, and (c) the high degree of phylogenetic relatedness of adenoviruses across their various primate hosts provided evidence for cross species transmission events to have occurred in the natural history of B and E viruses. The high degree of asymptomatic shedding of live adenovirus in non-human primates and evidence for zoonotic transmissions warrants caution for primate handling and housing. Furthermore, the presence of persistent and/or latent adenovirus infections in the gut should be considered in the design and interpretation of human and non-human primate studies with adenovirus vectors.
机译:腺病毒是重要的人类病原体,已被开发为基因治疗和基因疫苗的载体。先前的研究表明,人类对腺病毒的感染在具有免疫能力的宿主中是自限性的,并在腺样体组织中持续存在。我们试图更好地了解各种非人类灵长类动物中腺病毒感染的自然历史,并发现健康的大猿猴(黑猩猩,bo黑猩猩,大猩猩和猩猩)和猕猴在粪便中散发出大量传染性腺病毒。发现无症状人类的粪便脱落频率要低得多,与之前报道的频率相当。我们从猿类中纯化了30种新型腺病毒并对其进行了完全测序,并从猕猴中纯化了3种新型腺病毒。对新的猿腺病毒序列(以及我们先前报道的4条黑猩猩腺病毒序列)以及可从GenBank获得的22个完整腺病毒基因组的分析表明,(a)猿腺病毒可以清楚地分为与人腺病毒B类相对应的物种,C和E,(b)有证据表明腺病毒之间发生种内重组,(c)腺病毒在其各种灵长类宿主之间的高度系统发育相关性为跨物种传播事件发生在自然史中提供了证据。 B和E病毒。非人类灵长类动物体内高度无症状的活腺病毒脱落,以及人畜共患病的传播证据,确保在灵长类动物的处理和饲养上要格外小心。此外,在设计和解释使用腺病毒载体的人类和非人类灵长类动物研究中,应考虑肠道中存在持续性和/或潜伏性腺病毒感染。

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