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Canine Meningoencephalitis of Unknown Origin—The Search for Infectious Agents in the Cerebrospinal Fluid via Deep Sequencing

Jasmin Neßler, Wendy K. Jo, Albert D. M. E. Osterhaus, Martin Ludlow, Andrea Tipold

2021Frontiers in Veterinary Science22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Meningoencephalitis of unknown origin (MUO) describes a group of meningoencephalitides in dogs with a hitherto unknown trigger. An infectious agent has been suggested as one possible trigger of MUO but has not been proven so far. A relatively new method to screen for viral RNA or DNA is next-generation sequencing (NGS) or deep sequencing. In this study, a metagenomics analysis of the virome in a sample is analyzed and scanned for known or unknown viruses. We examined fresh-frozen CSF of 6 dogs with MUO via NGS using a modified sequence-independent, single-primer amplification protocol to detect a possible infectious trigger. Analysis of sequencing reads obtained from the six CSF samples showed no evidence of a virus infection. The inability to detect a viral trigger which could be implicated in the development of MUO in the examined population of European dogs, suggests that the current techniques are not sufficiently sensitive to identify a possible virus infection, that the virus is already eliminated at the time-point of disease outbreak, the trigger might be non-infectious or that there is no external trigger responsible for initiating MUO in dogs.

Topics & Concepts

Human viromeMeningoencephalitisVirologyBiologyDNA sequencingDeep sequencingVirusMetagenomicsInfectious disease (medical specialty)OutbreakCerebrospinal fluidPopulationImmunologyMedicineDiseaseDNAGeneticsGenomePathologyGeneEnvironmental healthNeuroscienceBacteriophages and microbial interactionsHerpesvirus Infections and TreatmentsMicrobial infections and disease research
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