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Detection of herpesviruses in neotropical primates from São Paulo, Brazil.

Isabella Naomi FurusatoKetlyn Bolsachini FigueiredoAna Carolina Souza Ramos de CarvalhoCamila Santos da Silva FerreiraJuliana Possatto Fernandes TakahashiLidia Midori KimuraCamila Siqueira AleixoOdília Pereira de BritoAdriana LuchsMariana Sequetin CunhaNatália Coelho Couto de Azevedo FernandesLeonardo José Tadeu de AraújoJosé Luiz Catão-DiasJuliana Mariotti Guerra
Published in: Brazilian journal of microbiology : [publication of the Brazilian Society for Microbiology] (2023)
Transmission of herpesvirus between humans and non-human primates represents a serious potential threat to human health and endangered species conservation. This study aimed to identify herpesvirus genomes in samples of neotropical primates (NTPs) in the state of São Paulo, Brazil. A total of 242 NTPs, including Callithrix sp., Alouatta sp., Sapajus sp., and Callicebus sp., were evaluated by pan-herpesvirus polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and sequencing. Sixty-two (25.6%) samples containing genome segments representative of members of the family Herpesviridae, including 16.1% for Callitrichine gammaherpesvirus 3, 6.1% for Human alphaherpesvirus 1, 2.1% for Alouatta macconnelli cytomegalovirus, and 0.83% for Cebus albifrons lymphocryptovirus 1. No co-infections were detected. The detection of herpesvirus genomes was significantly higher among adult animals (p = 0.033) and those kept under human care (p = 0.008671). These findings confirm the importance of monitoring the occurrence of herpesviruses in NTP populations in epizootic events.
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