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Domestic dog origin of <i>Carnivore Protoparvovirus 1</i> infection in a rescued free‐ranging guiña ( <i>Leopardus guigna)</i> in Chile

René Ortega, Juan Mena, Sofía Grecco, Ruben Pérez, Yanina Panzera, Constanza Napolitano, Nhur‐Aischa Zegpi, Alberto Sandoval, Daniel Sandoval, Daniel González‐Acuña, Sergio Cofré, Víctor Neira, Cristóbal Castillo‐Aliaga

2020Transboundary and Emerging Diseases18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Carnivore protoparvovirus 1 is one of the most important pathogens affecting both wild and domestic carnivores. Here, we reported the genetic characterization of canine parvovirus (CPV-2) strains from a rescued guiña (Leopardus guigna) and domestic dogs from Chile. Guiña strain was classified as CPV-2c, and phylogenetic analysis of the complete coding genome showed that the guiña CPV-2c strain shares a recent common ancestor with Chilean domestic dogs' strains. These viruses showed >99% identity and exhibited three changes in the NS1 protein (V596A, E661K and L582F). This is the first detection and genetic characterization of CPV-2c infection in guiña worldwide, and one of the few comparative studies that show the source of infection was domestic dogs. The current findings highlight the fact that guiña is a susceptible species to protoparvovirus infection and that domestic dogs represent an important threat to its conservation. The CPV-2 cross-species transmission between domestic dogs and guiña should be taken into account for protection programmes of this endangered species.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyCarnivoreEndangered speciesPhylogenetic treeZoologyPhylogeneticsLeopardusGeneticsEcologyGeneHabitatPredationVirus-based gene therapy researchAnimal Virus Infections StudiesParvovirus B19 Infection Studies
Domestic dog origin of <i>Carnivore Protoparvovirus 1</i> infection in a rescued free‐ranging guiña ( <i>Leopardus guigna)</i> in Chile | Litcius