Abstract

Of the seven known species of human retroviruses only one, human T-cell lymphotropic virus type 4 (HTLV-4), lacks a known animal reservoir. We report the largest screening for simian T-cell lymphotropic virus (STLV-4) to date in a wide range of captive and wild non-human primate (NHP) species from Cameroon. Among the 681 wild and 426 captive NHPs examined, we detected STLV-4 infection only among gorillas by using HTLV-4-specific quantitative polymerase chain reaction. The large number of samples analyzed, the diversity of NHP species examined, the geographic distribution of infected animals relative to the known HTLV-4 case, as well as detailed phylogenetic analyses on partial and full genomes, indicate that STLV-4 is endemic to gorillas, and that rather than being an ancient virus among humans, HTLV-4 emerged from a gorilla reservoir, likely through the hunting and butchering of wild gorillas. Our findings shed further light on the importance of gorillas as keystone reservoirs for the evolution and emergence of human infectious diseases and provide a clear course for preventing HTLV-4 emergence through management of human contact with wild gorillas, the development of improved assays for HTLV-4/STLV-4 detection and the ongoing monitoring of STLV-4 among gorillas and for HTLV-4 zoonosis among individuals exposed to gorilla populations.

Details

Title
A gorilla reservoir for human T-lymphotropic virus type 4
Author
Lebreton, Matthew; Switzer, William M; Djoko, Cyrille F; Gillis, Amethyst; Jia, Hongwei; Sturgeon, Michele M; Shankar, Anupama; Zheng, Haoqiang; Nkeunen, Gerard; Tamoufe, Ubald; Nana, Ahmadou; Le Doux Diffo, Joseph; Tafon, Babila; Kiyang, John; Schneider, Bradley S; Burke, Donald S; Wolfe, Nathan D
Pages
e7
Publication year
2014
Publication date
Jan 2014
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Ltd.
e-ISSN
22221751
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1792069514
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group Jan 2014