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Wildlife nidoviruses: biology, epidemiology, and disease associations of selected nidoviruses of mammals and reptiles

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journal contribution
posted on 2023-08-22, 05:52 authored by Andrew FliesAndrew Flies, Emily FliesEmily Flies, Nicholas MM Fountain-Jones, Ruth EE Musgrove, Rodrigo KK Hamede, Annie Philips, Matthew RF Perrott, Magdalena Dunowska
Wildlife is the source of many emerging infectious diseases. Several viruses from the order Nidovirales have recently emerged in wildlife, sometimes with severe consequences for endangered species. The order Nidovirales is currently classified into eight suborders, three of which contain viruses of vertebrates. Vertebrate coronaviruses (suborder Cornidovirineae) have been extensively studied, yet the other major suborders have received less attention. The aim of this minireview was to summarize the key findings from the published literature on nidoviruses of vertebrate wildlife from two suborders: Arnidovirineae and Tornidovirineae. These viruses were identified either during investigations of disease outbreaks or through molecular surveys of wildlife viromes, and include pathogens of reptiles and mammals. The available data on key biological features, disease associations, and pathology are presented, in addition to data on the frequency of infections among various host populations, and putative routes of transmission. While nidoviruses discussed here appear to have a restricted in vivo host range, little is known about their natural life cycle. Observational field-based studies outside of the mortality events are needed to facilitate an understanding of the virus-host-environment interactions that lead to the outbreaks. Laboratory-based studies are needed to understand the pathogenesis of diseases caused by novel nidoviruses and their evolutionary histories. Barriers preventing research progress include limited funding and the unavailability of virus- and host-specific reagents. To reduce mortalities in wildlife and further population declines, proactive development of expertise, technologies, and networks should be developed. These steps would enable effective management of future outbreaks and support wildlife conservation.

Funding

Select Foundation Senior Research Fellowship - Immunology : The Select Foundation

History

Publication title

mBio

Editors

VR Prasad, MD Stenglein

Pagination

17

eISSN

2150-7511

Department/School

Geography, Planning and Spatial Sciences, Menzies Institute for Medical Research, Office of the School of Natural Sciences

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY

Publication status

  • Published online

Rights statement

Copyright © 2023 Flies et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license

UN Sustainable Development Goals

3 Good Health and Well Being, 15 Life on Land

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