Abstract

Canine circovirus (CanineCV) is a recently identified virus affecting both domestic and wild carnivores, including foxes, sometimes in presence of severe clinical signs. Its circulation in wild animals can thus represent a potential threat for endangered species conservation and an infection source for dogs. Nevertheless, no data were available on its circulation in the Alps region of Northern Italy. In the present study, samples collected from 186 foxes in the period 2009–2020 from Valle d’Aosta and Veneto regions were tested using a real-time PCR assay, demonstrating a viral circulation of approximatively 2–5%, depending on the considered regions. Two complete or almost complete genome sequences were obtained, highlighting that the detected strains were part of a so defined “fox only” clade, which suggests that, despite common contact opportunities, Alps foxes are not involved in frequent transmission events to domestic dogs. Such genetic isolation could be at least partially attributed to some sort of independent evolution occurred in the foxes, leading to species barrier. Additionally, CanineCV strains in foxes from Italy were unexpectedly related to those previously identified in foxes from the United Kingdom and Scandinavian area. Combining the history of fox distribution in Europe since the last glacial maximum (LGM) with the viral history allowed us to speculate a long-standing coexistence between European canine circovirus and this host, justifying the peculiar geographic distribution and evolutionary paths of the fox infecting clade.

Highlights

  • The genus Circovirus includes small, non-enveloped, icosahedral viruses with a singlestranded circular DNA genome of approximately 2 kb in size, featured by the presence of two main open reading frames (ORFs) oriented in opposite directions

  • The present study aims to investigate the frequency and distribution of CanineCV in foxes from two alpine Italian areas, namely the Valle d’Aosta region in the Italian Western Alps (IWA), bordering France and Switzerland, and the Belluno province of Veneto region in the Italian Eastern Alps (IEA), bordering Austria and near to Slovenia

  • The present study results extend and update CanineCV epidemiology of foxes in Italy, revealing an infection frequency between ~2 and 5% depending on the considered areas, in line with or higher than other studies performed in the same country

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Summary

Introduction

The genus Circovirus includes small, non-enveloped, icosahedral viruses with a singlestranded circular DNA (ssDNA) genome of approximately 2 kb in size, featured by the presence of two main open reading frames (ORFs) oriented in opposite directions. The role of host jump in the origin of new circoviruses has been speculated [6]. Canine circovirus (CanineCV), identified in dogs with vasculitis and/or hemorrhagic gastroenteritis in the United States in 2012 [7], has been reported in several countries over time, including USA, Italy, Germany, and Taiwan, in presence of different clinical signs such as vomiting and diarrhea with hematochezia, necrotizing vasculitis and granulomatous lymphadenitis [7,8,9,10,11,12]. Fox-related strains resulted relatively genetically distant from those identified in other hosts [16], to the point that they have been considered as an independent species (referred to as Fox circovirus) for a long time

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