Abstract

Emerging viral disease is a significant concern, with potential consequences for human, animal and environmental health. Over the past several decades, multiple novel viruses have been found in wildlife species, including reptiles, and often pose a major threat to vulnerable species. However, whilst a large number of viruses have been described in turtles, information on poxvirus in cheloniids remains scarce, with no molecular sequence data available to date. This study characterizes, for the first time, a novel poxvirus, here tentatively designated cheloniid poxvirus 1 (ChePV-1). The affected cutaneous tissue, recovered from a green sea turtle (Chelonia mydas) captured off the Central Queensland coast of Australia, underwent histological examination, transmission electron microscopy (TEM), DNA extraction and genomic sequencing. The novel ChePV-1 was shown to be significantly divergent from other known poxviruses and showed the highest sequence similarity (89.3%) to avipoxviruses (shearwater poxvirus 2 (SWPV2)). This suggests the novel ChePV-1 may have originated from a common ancestor that diverged from an avipoxvirus-like progenitor. The genome contained three predicted unique genes and a further 15 genes being truncated/fragmented compared to SWPV2. This is the first comprehensive study that demonstrates evidence of poxvirus infection in a marine turtle species, as well as a rare example of an avipoxvirus crossing the avian-host barrier. This finding warrants further investigations into poxvirus infections between species in close physical proximity, as well as in vitro and in vivo studies of pathogenesis and disease.

Highlights

  • The green sea turtle (Chelonia mydas) is categorized as a “vulnerable” species in Australian waters [1], and “endangered” globally [2]

  • By transmission electron microscopy (TEM) no viral particles were discerned in these inclusions, which appeared to be composed of proteinaceous material (Figure 1B)

  • Fowlpox virus propagated in baby hamster kidney can be large as 270 × 350 nm detected by negatively stained EM [52]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The green sea turtle (Chelonia mydas) is categorized as a “vulnerable” species in Australian waters [1], and “endangered” globally [2]. At 5–10 years of age, pelagic juvenile green sea turtles return to coastal environments and establish a feeding site, where their diet consists predominantly of macroalgae, seagrass and mangrove material [6,7,8]. Their value as a sentinel species is relevant in Gladstone Harbor, Australia, where feeding green sea turtles display an average cumulative home range of only 6.7 ± 0.8 km2 95% kernel utilization distribution [9]. The Gladstone Harbor estuary, located at the southern end of the Great

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call