Abstract

Three human protoparvoviruses, bufavirus (BuV), tusavirus (TuV) and cutavirus (CuV), have recently been discovered in diarrheal stool. BuV has been associated with diarrhea and CuV with cutaneous T-cell lymphoma, but there are hardly any data for TuV or CuV in stool or respiratory samples. Hence, using qPCR and IgG enzyme immunoassays, we analyzed 1072 stool, 316 respiratory and 445 serum or plasma samples from 1098 patients with and without gastroenteritis (GE) or respiratory-tract infections (RTI) from Finland, Latvia and Malawi. The overall CuV-DNA prevalences in stool samples ranged between 0–6.1% among our six patient cohorts. In Finland, CuV DNA was significantly more prevalent in GE patients above rather than below 60 years of age (5.1% vs 0.2%). CuV DNA was more prevalent in stools among Latvian and Malawian children compared with Finnish children. In 10/11 CuV DNA-positive adults and 4/6 CuV DNA-positive children with GE, no known causal pathogens were detected. Interestingly, for the first time, CuV DNA was observed in two nasopharyngeal aspirates from children with RTI and the rare TuV in diarrheal stools of two adults. Our results provide new insights on the occurrence of human protoparvoviruses in GE and RTI in different countries.

Highlights

  • Parvoviridae is a family of small nonenveloped single-stranded DNA viruses that infect host- many diverse animal species

  • CuV DNA was detected in stool samples from 26/1039 (2.5%) adults and children in the current study (Table 2)

  • The prevalence of CuV DNA in stool samples among the six cohorts was between 0–6.1%

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Summary

Introduction

Parvoviridae is a family of small nonenveloped single-stranded DNA viruses that infect host- many diverse animal species. There are two known human pathogens: parvovirus B19 (B19V), causing erythema infectiosum, arthritis, anemias and fetal death; and human bocavirus (HBoV) 1, causing pediatric respiratory-tract infections (RTI) and, infrequently, encephalitis. Parvovirus 4 and HBoV2-4 infect humans with unclear disease associations [1]. In 2012–2016, metagenomic studies revealed, in human diarrheal stool samples, three more parvoviruses belonging to the Protoparvovirus genus: bufavirus (BuV), tusavirus (TuV) and cutavirus (CuV) [2,3,4]. There are three known genotypes of BuV [5,6]. The clinical impact of the newly discovered protoparvoviruses is largely unknown

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