Abstract

The Brazilian Cerrado fauna shows very wide diversity and can be a potential viral reservoir. Therefore, the animal’s susceptibility to some virus can serve as early warning signs of potential human virus diseases. Moreover, the wild animal virome of this biome is unknown. Based on this scenario, high-throughput sequencing contributes a robust tool for the identification of known and unknown virus species in this environment. In the present study, faeces samples from cerrado birds (Psittacara leucophthalmus, Amazona aestiva, and Sicalis flaveola) and mammals (Didelphis albiventris, Sapajus libidinosus, and Galictis cuja) were collected at the Veterinary Hospital, University of Brasília. Viral nucleic acid was extracted, submitted to random amplification, and sequenced by Illumina HiSeq platform. The reads were de novo assembled, and the identities of the contigs were evaluated by Blastn and tblastx searches. Most viral contigs analyzed were closely related to bacteriophages. Novel archaeal viruses of the Smacoviridae family were detected. Moreover, sequences of members of Adenoviridae, Anelloviridae, Circoviridae, Caliciviridae, and Parvoviridae families were identified. Complete and nearly complete genomes of known anelloviruses, circoviruses, and parvoviruses were obtained, as well as putative novel species. We demonstrate that the metagenomics approach applied in this work was effective for identification of known and putative new viruses in faeces samples from Brazilian Cerrado fauna.

Highlights

  • Cerrado is a Brazilian savannah and one of the most diverse biomes in the world

  • Associated with wildlife conservation, environmental degradation is a problem for public health, since wild animals can serve as reservoirs or intermediate hosts for new zoonotic pathogens such as viruses

  • Pool 1 was composed by faecal samples of A. aestiva and S. flaveola and pool 2 with P. leucophthalmus, D. albiventris, S. libidinosus, and G. cuja samples

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Summary

Introduction

Cerrado is a Brazilian savannah and one of the most diverse biomes in the world It has been threatened by livestock and agricultural crop production expansion. Many zoonotic virus diseases have been emerging or re-emerging, especially, those caused by alphaviruses (Chikungunya virus, Mayaro virus, Madariaga virus) [2,3], bunyaviruses (Oropouche virus) [4], and flaviviruses (Zika, dengue, and yellow fever viruses) [5]. In this scenario, the deforestation can increase the contact between humans and animals, inclusively vectors, contributing to the emergence of diseases outbreaks in different regions of the world [6,7]

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