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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

New type of dog papillomavirus discovered called CPV26

By Munday, John S et al.·Published in Viruses·2024·School of Veterinary Science·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Canis Familiaris Papillomavirus Type 26: A Novel Papillomavirus of Dogs and the First Canine Papillomavirus within theGenus.

Species:
dog
Skin & coatDogs

Plain-English summary

A dog with a mouth wart was found to have a new type of canine papillomavirus (CPV26) in its lesion. Researchers discovered this virus while studying various papillomas in dogs, and they found CPV26 DNA in one of the samples. While it's unclear if this virus causes any health issues, the lack of a specific protein suggests it may not be harmful. This finding adds to the understanding of viruses that can affect dogs and their relatives in the animal kingdom.

People also search for: dog mouth wart treatment · canine papillomavirus symptoms · what causes warts on dogs

Abstract

Domestic dogs are currently recognized as being infected by 25 different canine papillomavirus (CPV) types classified into three genera. A short sequence from a novel CPV type was amplified, along with CPV1, from a papilloma (wart) from the mouth of a dog. The entire 7499 bp genome was amplified, and CPV26 contained putative coding regions that were predicted to produce four early proteins and two late ones. The ORF L1 showed less than 62% similarity for all previously sequenced CPV types but over 69% similarity to multipletypes from a variety of Caniform species including the giant panda, Weddel seal, and polar bear. Phylogenetic analysis confirmed CPV26 clusters within thegenus. Specific primers were used to investigate the presence of CPV26 DNA within a series of 37 canine proliferative lesions. CPV26 DNA was amplified from one lesion, a cutaneous papilloma that also contained CPV6. This is the first time a PV type within thegenus has been detected in a non-domestic species and this provides evidence that the omegapapillomaviruses infected a common ancestor of, and then co-evolved with, the Caniform species. Whether CPV26 causes disease is uncertain, but the absence of an E7 protein may suggest low pathogenicity.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38675936/