PERSISTENT LOW-LEVEL INFECTIONS OF ELEPHANT ENDOTHELIOTROPIC HERPESVIRUS AND ELEPHANT GAMMAHERPESVIRUSDETECTED IN SKIN NODULES AND SALIVA FROM WILD AND ZOO AFRICAN ELEPHANTS
PERSISTENT LOW-LEVEL INFECTIONS OF ELEPHANT ENDOTHELIOTROPIC HERPESVIRUS AND ELEPHANT GAMMAHERPESVIRUSDETECTED IN SKIN NODULES AND SALIVA FROM WILD AND ZOO AFRICAN ELEPHANTS
Pearson, V. R.; Hayward, G. S.
AbstractThis novel study detected persistent low level infections of Elephant Endotheliotropic Herpesviruses (EEHV), that can cause highly pathogenic Elephant Hemorrhagic Disease (EHD) in Loxodonta and Elephas, and co-infection of presumed less pathogenic Elephant Gammaherpesviruses (EGHV), in skin nodule biopsies, saliva and tissues collected from 43 wild L. africana (savannah elephant) in Botswana, Kenya, South Africa and Zimbabwe; in saliva from 25 wild L. cyclotis (forest elephant) in Gabon; and in saliva collected over seven years from 7 wild-born L.africana at Six Flags Safari Park, USA; and in saliva, blood and tissues from an additional 200 L. africana in USA zoos. DNA from these samples was extracted in our USA laboratories and amplified by conventional polymerase chain reaction using three-round nested primer sets designed specifically to screen for known EEHV and EGHV genes loci and to discover new species and subtypes. Sanger sequencing of purified DNA from nearly all samples yielded unambiguous positive genetic matches to previously known Loxodonta-associated EEHV2, EEHV3A, EEHV3B, EEHV6, EEHV7A, and EGHV1B, EGHV2, EGHV3B, EGHV4B, EGHV5B and discovered novel types EEHV3C-H and EEHV7B and the prototype EGHV1B. Many of the primer sets used could also have detected known Elephas-associated EEHV1A, EEHV1B, EEHV4, and EEHV5 if present in these samples, but they did not. Our extensive library of EEHV and EGHV sequences from wild and zoo Loxodonta, (as well as from 100 zoo Elephas maximus not discussed in this review), is a significant contribution to the elephant virology community, particularly for comparing subtypes types of EEHV found in pathogenic cases of EHD in zoos as well as determining and comparing species and subtypes of EEHV present in existing zoo herds, and in individual elephants being transported between zoos, and for importation of wild elephants into existing zoo herds.