2011
DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1002306
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Frequent and Recent Human Acquisition of Simian Foamy Viruses Through Apes' Bites in Central Africa

Abstract: Human infection by simian foamy viruses (SFV) can be acquired by persons occupationally exposed to non-human primates (NHP) or in natural settings. This study aimed at getting better knowledge on SFV transmission dynamics, risk factors for such a zoonotic infection and, searching for intra-familial dissemination and the level of peripheral blood (pro)viral loads in infected individuals. We studied 1,321 people from the general adult population (mean age 49 yrs, 640 women and 681 men) and 198 individuals, mostl… Show more

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Cited by 109 publications
(167 citation statements)
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“…This includes intrauterine, perinatal, and/or breast-feeding-mediated transmission as observed for other exogenous retroviruses (e.g., deltaretroviruses, lentiviruses), saliva-saliva contacts through fruit sharing, and saliva-blood contact through grooming on wounds or bites and nips received by infants during weaning. Although saliva has not yet been proven to be the main shedding site of SF viral particles in chimpanzees (in contrast to findings for other primates [31,41]), transmission of SFV from chimpanzees to humans following severe bites (9,14,42) and SF viral particle detection from chimpanzee fecal samples (3, 15) qualify it as the most likely medium for effective transmission of SFV among chimpanzees. While we show here that mother-offspring transmission of SFV occurs frequently and therefore likely stands as a privileged route for primary infection, it is worth to note that not all siblings were infected with one of their mother's SFVs.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This includes intrauterine, perinatal, and/or breast-feeding-mediated transmission as observed for other exogenous retroviruses (e.g., deltaretroviruses, lentiviruses), saliva-saliva contacts through fruit sharing, and saliva-blood contact through grooming on wounds or bites and nips received by infants during weaning. Although saliva has not yet been proven to be the main shedding site of SF viral particles in chimpanzees (in contrast to findings for other primates [31,41]), transmission of SFV from chimpanzees to humans following severe bites (9,14,42) and SF viral particle detection from chimpanzee fecal samples (3, 15) qualify it as the most likely medium for effective transmission of SFV among chimpanzees. While we show here that mother-offspring transmission of SFV occurs frequently and therefore likely stands as a privileged route for primary infection, it is worth to note that not all siblings were infected with one of their mother's SFVs.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A recent study of apes north and south of the Uele River documented a major increase in chimpanzee killing due to an influx of artisanal diamond and gold miners (26). Thus, increased surveillance of humans in these areas for SIVcpzPts and other ape-derived infections may be warranted (6,11,38).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several studies have documented the transmission of SFV to humans who interact directly with Old World (OW) NHP, including Cercopithicus species, baboons, macaques, mandrills, gorillas, and chimpanzees (reviewed in reference 7). SFV antibody-positive humans have been found in a variety of natural settings, including people in Asia who live in areas with free-ranging macaques, villagers in Gabon with known exposure to NHP, and a population of hunters in Cameroon with bites from Old World NHP (6,(8)(9)(10)(11). SFV antibody-positive humans have also been documented in various laboratory, veterinary, and zoo settings (12-17).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%