open access publication

Preprint, 2024

Diverse fox circovirus (Circovirus canine) variants circulate at high prevalence in grey wolves (Canis lupus) from the Northwest Territories, Canada

bioRxiv, Page 2024.03.08.584028, 10.1101/2024.03.08.584028

Contributors

Canuti, Marta 0000-0002-9959-128X (Corresponding author) [1] King, Abigail V.L. [2] Franzo, Giovanni 0000-0003-2991-217X [3] Cluff, H Dean 0000-0002-9233-1450 [4] Larsen, Lars Erik 0000-0003-0730-5555 [1] Fenton, Heather [4] Dufour, Suzanne C [2] Lang, Andrew S 0000-0002-4510-7683 [2]

Affiliations

  1. [1] University of Copenhagen
  2. [NORA names: KU University of Copenhagen; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  3. [2] Memorial University of Newfoundland
  4. [NORA names: Canada; America, North; OECD];
  5. [3] University of Padua
  6. [NORA names: Italy; Europe, EU; OECD];
  7. [4] Government of Northwest Territories
  8. [NORA names: Canada; America, North; OECD]

Abstract

Abstract Canine circoviruses (CanineCV) have a worldwide distribution in dogs and are occasionally detected in wild carnivorans, indicating their ability for cross-species transmission. However, fox circovirus, a lineage of CanineCV, has been identified exclusively in wild canids. We analyzed spleen samples from 159 grey wolves from the Northwest Territories, Canada, to investigate the molecular epidemiology of CanineCV and formulate hypotheses about virus ecology and evolution. Overall, 72 out of 159 (45.3%) animals tested positive. Virus prevalence was similar between males and females, adults and juveniles, and across the investigated years and locations. CanineCV infection was not associated with a poor body condition. While the percentage of co-infections with canine parvoviruses, investigated in a previous study, was high (63/72, 87.5%), the rate of parvovirus infection in CanineCV-negative animals was significantly lower (42/87, 48.3%, χ 2 = 27.03, p < 0.001), and CanineCV infection was associated with a 7.5- and 2.4-fold increase in the risk of acquiring canine parvovirus 2 or canine bufavirus infections, respectively (odds ratios: 3.5-16.9 and 1.3-5.8). Although common risk factors cannot be ruled out, this suggests that CanineCV may facilitate parvoviral super-infections. Sequencing revealed high CanineCV genetic diversity, further exacerbated by recombination. Of the 69 sequenced strains, 87.5% were fox circoviruses, five were related to a fox circovirus-like recombinant strain, and one belonged to a distant lineage. In the phylogenetic analysis, the virus sequences were distributed according to sampling locations, with some viruses being geographically restricted. Different clades of viruses were identified in the same areas and over multiple years (2007-2019), indicating the co-existence of multiple endemic lineages in the investigated area. Phylogenetic analysis of all available complete fox circovirus genomes (32 from foxes and 15 from wolves from North America and Europe) demonstrated four lineages, each including sequences from this study. Within each lineage, strains segregated geographically and not by host. This implies that, although multiple lineages co-exist, viruses do not frequently move between locations. Finally, viruses from Europe and North America were mixed, indicating that the origin of the four lineages might predate the segregation of European and American wolf and fox populations. Given the high prevalence and diversity of fox circoviruses in wolves, these animals should be considered reservoir hosts for these viruses. Although we cannot exclude a lower susceptibility of dogs, the lack of fox circovirus in dogs could be due to environmental circumstances that prevented its spread to dogs. Given the high diversity and wild host specificity, we presume a long-lasting association between fox circovirus and canine hosts and hypothesize a higher likelihood of transmission from dogs to wild animals than vice versa. Further studies should investigate other sympatric wild species and additional locations to explore the possible existence of additional maintenance hosts and the reasons behind the marked difference in cross-species transmission dynamics among CanineCV lineages.

Keywords

America, Canada, CanineCV, Canis, Canis lupus, Europe, North, North America, Northwest, Northwest Territories, adults, analysis, animals, area, association, body condition, canids, canine, canine hosts, canine parvovirus, canine parvovirus-2, carnivorans, circovirus, circovirus genomes, circumstances, clade, clade of viruses, co-existence, co-infection, conditions, cross-species transmission, distant lineages, distribution, diversity, dogs, dynamics, ecology, endemic lineages, environmental circumstances, evolution, factors, females, fox circovirus, fox populations, foxes, genetic diversity, genome, gray wolves, higher likelihood, highest prevalence, host, host specificity, hypothesis, increase, infection, investigated area, investigated years, juveniles, lack, likelihood of transmission, lineages, location, lupus, maintenance, maintenance hosts, male, molecular epidemiology, multiple lineages, multiple years, origin, parvovirus, parvovirus infection, percentage, percentage of co-infections, phylogenetic analysis, poor body condition, population, prevalence, rate, recombinant strains, recombination, reservoir, reservoir hosts, risk, risk factors, samples, sampling locations, segregation, sequence, sequenced strains, species, specificity, spleen samples, spread, strain, study, super-infection, susceptibility, susceptibility of dogs, territory, transmission, transmission dynamics, variants, virus, virus ecology, virus prevalence, virus sequences, wild animals, wild canids, wild carnivorans, wild species, wolves, years

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