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Transmission of Koala Retrovirus from Parent Koalas to a Joey in a Japanese Zoo
Author(s) -
Abul Hashem,
Fumie Maetani,
Mohammad Enamul Hoque Kayesh,
Taiki Eiei,
Kyoya Mochizuki,
Ayaka Ito,
Hiroko Sakurai,
Takayuki Asai,
Kyoko TsukiyamaKohara
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of virology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.617
H-Index - 292
eISSN - 1070-6321
pISSN - 0022-538X
DOI - 10.1128/jvi.00019-20
Subject(s) - transmission (telecommunications) , biology , horizontal transmission , strain (injury) , genetics , zoology , evolutionary biology , ecology , virus , anatomy , computer science , telecommunications
Koala retrovirus (KoRV) is of an interest to virologists due to its currently active endogenization into the koala ( Phascolarctos cinereus ) genome. Although KoRV has frequently been isolated in wild and captive koala populations, its pathogenesis and transmission remain to be fully characterized, and most previous research has concentrated on adult koalas rather than on joeys. Here, we characterized KoRV isolates obtained from a deceased male joey and its parents (animals reared in a Japanese zoo) to investigate KoRV transmission mode and pathogenesis. We sequenced the KoRV long terminal repeat (LTR) and envelope genes isolated from the joey and its parents and found KoRV-A and KoRV-C in genomic DNA from both the parents and the joey. Notably, both parents were also positive for KoRV-B, whereas the joey was KoRV-B negative, further confirming that KoRV-B is an exogenous strain. The KoRV LTR sequence of the joey was considerably closer to that of its sire than its dam. For further characterization, total KoRV, KoRV-A, KoRV-B, and KoRV-C proviral loads were quantified in peripheral blood mononuclear cells from the parents and in blood samples from the joey. Total KoRV, KoRV-A, and KoRV-C proviral loads were also quantified for different tissues (bone, liver, kidney, lung, spleen, heart, and muscle) from the joey, revealing differences suggestive of a distinct tissue tropism (highest total KoRV proviral load in the spleen and lowest in bone). The amount of KoRV-C in the parents was less than that in the joey. Our findings contribute to an improved understanding of KoRV pathogenesis and transmission mode and highlight useful areas for future research. IMPORTANCE KoRV is unique among retroviruses in that one strain (KoRV-A) is undergoing endogenization, whereas the other main subtype (KoRV-B) and another subtype (KoRV-C) are reportedly exogenous strains. Its transmission and pathogenesis are of interest in the study of retroviruses and are crucial for any conservation strategy geared toward koala health. This study provides new evidence on the modes of KoRV transmission from parent koalas to their joey. We found vertical transmission of KoRV-A, confirming its endogenization, but with closer conservation between the joey and its sire than its dam (previous reports on joeys are rare but have postulated dam-to-joey vertical transmission). This is also the first report of a KoRV-B-negative joey from KoRV-B-positive parents, contrasting with the few previous reports of 100% transmission of KoRV-B from dams to joeys. Thus, the results in this study give some novel insights for the transmission mode of KoRV.

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