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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Detecting and studying Carnivore chaphamaparvovirus 1 in dogs

By Palombieri, Andrea et al.·Published in Veterinary microbiology·2020·Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Italy·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Molecular detection and characterization of Carnivore chaphamaparvovirus 1 in dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs with diarrhea was tested for a newly recognized virus called canine chaphamaparvovirus (CaChPV) during an outbreak in Colorado. The study found that while CaChPV was present in some dogs with diarrhea, they were also infected with other viruses like canine parvovirus and canine coronavirus. In contrast, healthy dogs showed no signs of illness despite having CaChPV in their stools. This suggests that CaChPV might not be the main cause of diarrhea in dogs, especially when other viruses are involved. More research is needed to understand the role of this virus in canine health.

People also search for: dog diarrhea causes · canine parvovirus symptoms · what is chaphamaparvovirus in dogs

Abstract

Canine chaphamaparvovirus (CaChPV) is a newly recognised parvovirus discovered by metagenomic analysis during an outbreak of diarrhoea in dogs in Colorado, USA, in 2017 and more recently detected in diarrhoeic dogs in China. Whether the virus plays a role as canine pathogen and whether it is distributed elsewhere, in other geographical areas, is not known. We performed a case-control study to investigate the possible association of CaChPV with enteritis in dogs. CaChPV DNA was detected both in the stools of diarrhoeic dogs (1.9 %, 3/155) and of healthy animals (1.6 %, 2/120). All the CaChPV-infected dogs with diarrhea were mixed infected with other enteric viruses such as canine parvovirus (formerly CPV-2), canine bufavirus (CBuV) and canine coronavirus (CCoV), whilst none of the asymptomatic CaChPV positive animals resulted co-infected. The nearly full-length genome and the partial capsid protein (VP) gene of three canine strains, Te/36OVUD/19/ITA, Te/37OVUD/19/ITA and Te/70OVUD/19/ITA, were reconstructed. Upon phylogenetic analyses based on the NS1 and VP aa sequences, the Italian CaChPV strains tightly clustered with the American reference viruses. Distinctive residues could be mapped to the deduced variable regions of the VP of canine and feline chaphamaparvoviruses, considered as important markers of host range and pathogenicity for parvoviruses.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33069035/