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"Guzman-Vargas, Veronica"
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Epidemiological factors associated with Turtle fraservirus 1 (TFV1) in freshwater turtles in Florida, USA
by
Sylvia, Andrea
,
Waltzek, Thomas B.
,
Shender, Lisa A.
in
Animals
,
Biology and Life Sciences
,
Datasets
2025
Turtle fraservirus 1 (TFV1) is an emerging pathogen that was first discovered in freshwater turtles in peninsular Florida (USA) in 2018. The incubation period, transmission route(s), range of virus-susceptible species, and other key epidemiological factors that pertain to this disease are still unknown. Therefore, the primary aims of this work were to 1) evaluate TFV1 infection and available metadata using an epidemiological framework and 2) summarize our findings into Florida-specific guidance for turtle morbidity (e.g., diseased condition) and mortality investigations by managers faced with limited resources. This study included several species of sick or dead freshwater turtles collected from 9 March 2018 until 5 September 2021. These collections were greatly facilitated by public reporting and submissions from state-permitted wildlife rehabilitation centers. To evaluate data obtained from different stages of a mortality investigation, we developed four datasets pertaining to field collection, necropsy findings, weather conditions, and spatial and temporal patterns. Within each dataset, we used logistic regression to determine the relative effect of available explanatory variables on the probability of a TFV1-positive PCR test result. We found that >50% (47/93) turtles tested positive for TFV1. The presence of cloacal and/or oral plaques in softshell turtles was strongly associated with TFV1-positive infection status. Furthermore, turtles that were collected from clustered mortality events (>1 turtle found sick or deceased) were more likely to test positive, with both distance and time being important defining factors. Our overall findings are compatible with a highly transmissible waterborne virus that is shed in urine or other secretions, and we suggest that future research should prioritize the study of potential direct transmission. The identification and spread of TFV1 in peninsular Florida provide further validation for the strict implementation of biosecurity practices in order to mitigate inadvertent transfer of aquatic pathogens.
Journal Article
A novel group of negative-sense RNA viruses associated with epizootics in managed and free-ranging freshwater turtles in Florida, USA
by
Ossiboff, Robert J.
,
Subramaniam, Kuttichantran
,
Koonin, Eugene V.
in
Actinemys marmorata
,
Animals
,
Apalone ferox
2022
Few aquatic animal negative-sense RNA viruses have been characterized, and their role in disease is poorly understood. Here, we describe a virus isolated from diseased freshwater turtles from a Florida farm in 2007 and from an ongoing epizootic among free-ranging populations of Florida softshell turtles (
Apalone ferox
), Florida red-bellied cooters (
Pseudemys nelsoni
), and peninsula cooters (
Pseudemys peninsularis
). Affected turtles presented with similar neurological signs, oral and genital ulceration, and secondary microbial infections. Microscopic lesions were most severe in the softshell turtles and included heterophilic/histiocytic meningoencephalitis, multi-organ vasculitis, and cytologic observation of leukocytic intracytoplasmic inclusions. The virus was isolated using Terrapene heart (TH-1) cells. Ultrastructurally, viral particles were round to pleomorphic and acquired an envelope with prominent surface projections by budding from the cell membrane. Viral genomes were sequenced from cDNA libraries of two nearly identical isolates and determined to be bi-segmented, with an ambisense coding arrangement. The larger segment encodes a predicted RNA-directed RNA polymerase (RdRP) and a putative zinc-binding matrix protein. The smaller segment encodes a putative nucleoprotein and an envelope glycoprotein precursor (GPC). Thus, the genome organization of this turtle virus resembles that of arenaviruses. Phylogenetic analysis shows that the RdRP of the turtle virus is highly diverged from the RdRPs of all known negative-sense RNA viruses and forms a deep branch within the phylum Negarnaviricota, that is not affiliated with any known group of viruses, even at the class level. In contrast, the GPC protein of the turtle virus is confidently affiliated with homologs from a distinct group of fish hantaviruses. Thus, the turtle virus is expected to become the founder of a new taxon of negative-sense RNA viruses, at least with a family rank, but likely, an order or even a class. These viruses probably evolved either by reassortment or by intrasegment recombination between a virus from a distinct branch of negarnaviruses distant from all known groups and a hanta-like aquatic virus. We suggest the provisional name Tosoviridae for the putative new family, with Turtle fraservirus 1 (TFV1) as the type species within the genus Fraservirus. A conventional RT-PCR assay, targeting the TFV1 RdRP, confirmed the presence of viral RNA in multiple tissues and exudates from diseased turtles. The systemic nature of the TFV1 infection was further supported by labeling of cells within lesions using
in situ
hybridization targeting the RNA of the TFV1 RdRP.
Journal Article
Correction: Epidemiological factors associated with Turtle fraservirus 1 (TFV1) in freshwater turtles in Florida, USA
2025
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0320097.].
Journal Article
A novel group of negative-sense RNA viruses associated with epizootics in managed and free-ranging freshwater turtles in Florida, USA
2022
Few aquatic animal negative-sense RNA viruses have been characterized, and their role in disease is poorly understood. Here, we describe a virus isolated from diseased freshwater turtles from a Florida farm in 2007 and from an ongoing epizootic among free-ranging populations of Florida softshell turtles (Apalone ferox), Florida red-bellied cooters (Pseudemys nelsoni), and peninsula cooters (Pseudemys peninsularis). Affected turtles presented with similar neurological signs, oral and genital ulceration, and secondary microbial infections. Microscopic lesions were most severe in the softshell turtles and included heterophilic/histiocytic meningoencephalitis, multi-organ vasculitis, and cytologic observation of leukocytic intracytoplasmic inclusions. The virus was isolated using Terrapene heart (TH-1) cells. Ultrastructurally, viral particles were round to pleomorphic and acquired an envelope with prominent surface projections by budding from the cell membrane. Viral genomes were sequenced from cDNA libraries of two nearly identical isolates and determined to be bi-segmented, with an ambisense coding arrangement. The larger segment encodes a predicted RNA-directed RNA polymerase (RdRP) and a putative zinc-binding matrix protein. The smaller segment encodes a putative nucleoprotein and an envelope glycoprotein precursor (GPC). Thus, the genome organization of this turtle virus resembles that of arenaviruses. Phylogenetic analysis shows that the RdRP of the turtle virus is highly diverged from the RdRPs of all known negative-sense RNA viruses and forms a deep branch within the phylum Negarnaviricota, that is not affiliated with any known group of viruses, even at the class level. In contrast, the GPC protein of the turtle virus is confidently affiliated with homologs from a distinct group of fish hantaviruses. Thus, the turtle virus is expected to become the founder of a new taxon of negative-sense RNA viruses, at least with a family rank, but likely, an order or even a class. These viruses probably evolved either by reassortment or by intrasegment recombination between a virus from a distinct branch of negarnaviruses distant from all known groups and a hanta-like aquatic virus. We suggest the provisional name Tosoviridae for the putative new family, with Turtle fraservirus 1 (TFV1) as the type species within the genus Fraservirus. A conventional RT-PCR assay, targeting the TFV1 RdRP, confirmed the presence of viral RNA in multiple tissues and exudates from diseased turtles. The systemic nature of the TFV1 infection was further supported by labeling of cells within lesions using in situ hybridization targeting the RNA of the TFV1 RdRP.
Journal Article
Correction: Epidemiological factors associated with Turtle fraservirus 1 (TFV1) in freshwater turtles in Florida, USA
2025
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0320097.].
Journal Article