A Strategy To Estimate Unknown Viral Diversity in Mammals

Author:

Anthony Simon J.12,Epstein Jonathan H.2,Murray Kris A.2,Navarrete-Macias Isamara1,Zambrana-Torrelio Carlos M.2,Solovyov Alexander1,Ojeda-Flores Rafael3,Arrigo Nicole C.1,Islam Ariful2,Ali Khan Shahneaz4,Hosseini Parviez2,Bogich Tiffany L.56,Olival Kevin J.2,Sanchez-Leon Maria D.12,Karesh William B.2,Goldstein Tracey7,Luby Stephen P.8,Morse Stephen S.79,Mazet Jonna A. K.7,Daszak Peter2,Lipkin W. Ian1

Affiliation:

1. Center for Infection and Immunity, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, New York, USA

2. EcoHealth Alliance, New York, New York, USA

3. Facultad de Medicina Veterinaria and Zootecnia, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Ciudad Universitaria, Mexico City, Distrito Federal, Mexico

4. Chittagong Veterinary and Animal Sciences University, Chittagong, Bangladesh

5. Princeton University, Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Princeton, New Jersey, USA

6. Fogarty International Center, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, USA

7. One Health Institute & Wildlife Health Center, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California Davis, Davis, California, USA

8. International Center for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Dhaka, Bangladesh

9. Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, New York, USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT The majority of emerging zoonoses originate in wildlife, and many are caused by viruses. However, there are no rigorous estimates of total viral diversity (here termed “virodiversity”) for any wildlife species, despite the utility of this to future surveillance and control of emerging zoonoses. In this case study, we repeatedly sampled a mammalian wildlife host known to harbor emerging zoonotic pathogens (the Indian Flying Fox, Pteropus giganteus ) and used PCR with degenerate viral family-level primers to discover and analyze the occurrence patterns of 55 viruses from nine viral families. We then adapted statistical techniques used to estimate biodiversity in vertebrates and plants and estimated the total viral richness of these nine families in P. giganteus to be 58 viruses. Our analyses demonstrate proof-of-concept of a strategy for estimating viral richness and provide the first statistically supported estimate of the number of undiscovered viruses in a mammalian host. We used a simple extrapolation to estimate that there are a minimum of 320,000 mammalian viruses awaiting discovery within these nine families, assuming all species harbor a similar number of viruses, with minimal turnover between host species. We estimate the cost of discovering these viruses to be ~$6.3 billion (or ~$1.4 billion for 85% of the total diversity), which if annualized over a 10-year study time frame would represent a small fraction of the cost of many pandemic zoonoses. IMPORTANCE Recent years have seen a dramatic increase in viral discovery efforts. However, most lack rigorous systematic design, which limits our ability to understand viral diversity and its ecological drivers and reduces their value to public health intervention. Here, we present a new framework for the discovery of novel viruses in wildlife and use it to make the first-ever estimate of the number of viruses that exist in a mammalian host. As pathogens continue to emerge from wildlife, this estimate allows us to put preliminary bounds around the potential size of the total zoonotic pool and facilitates a better understanding of where best to allocate resources for the subsequent discovery of global viral diversity.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Virology,Microbiology

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