Repository logo
 

Redondoviridae: High Prevalence and Possibly Chronic Shedding in Human Respiratory Tract, But No Zoonotic Transmission.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Deng, Xutao 
Hong, Nguyen Thi Thu 
Ny, Nguyen Thi Han 
Phuc, Tran My 

Abstract

Redondoviridae is a recently discovered DNA virus family consisting of two species, vientovirus and brisavirus. Here we used PCR amplification and sequencing to characterize redondoviruses in nasal/throat swabs collected longitudinally from a cohort of 58 individuals working with animals in Vietnam. We additionally analyzed samples from animals to which redondovirus DNA-positive participants were exposed. Redondoviruses were detected in approximately 60% of study participants, including 33% (30/91) of samples collected during episodes of acute respiratory disease and in 50% (29/58) of baseline samples (with no respiratory symptoms). Vientovirus (73%; 24/33) was detected more frequently in samples than brisaviruses (27%; 9/33). In the 23 participants with at least 2 redondovirus-positive samples among their longitudinal samples, 10 (43.5%) had identical redondovirus replication-gene sequences detected (sampling duration: 35-132 days). We found no identical redondovirus replication genes in samples from different participants, and no redondoviruses were detected in 53 pooled nasal/throat swabs collected from domestic animals. Phylogenetic analysis described no large-scale geographical clustering between viruses from Vietnam, the US, Spain, and China, indicating that redondoviruses are highly genetically diverse and have a wide geographical distribution. Collectively, our study provides novel insights into the Redondoviridae family in humans, describing a high prevalence, potentially associated with chronic shedding in the respiratory tract with lack of evidence of zoonotic transmission from close animal contacts. The tropism and potential pathogenicity of this viral family remain to be determined.

Description

Keywords

animals, brisavirus, persistence, redondoviruses, respiratory, vientovirus, zoonosis, Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Animals, Child, Cohort Studies, DNA Viruses, Farmers, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Nose, Pharynx, Phylogeny, Prevalence, Respiratory Tract Infections, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Vietnam, Viral Zoonoses, Virus Shedding, Young Adult

Journal Title

Viruses

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1999-4915
1999-4915

Volume Title

13

Publisher

MDPI AG