<p>Mpox, caused by the monkeypox virus (MPXV; <i>Orthopoxvirus monkeypox</i>), is on the rise in West and Central Africa<sup><CitationRef AdditionalCitationIDS="CR2" CitationID="CR1">1</CitationRef>–<CitationRef CitationID="CR3">3</CitationRef></sup>. African rodents, especially squirrels, are suspected to be involved in MPXV emergence, but no evidence of a direct transmission to humans or non-human primates has been established<sup><CitationRef AdditionalCitationIDS="CR5 CR6 CR7 CR8" CitationID="CR4">4</CitationRef>–<CitationRef CitationID="CR9">9</CitationRef></sup>. Here we describe an outbreak of MPXV in a group of wild sooty mangabeys (<i>Cercocebus atys</i>) in Taï National Park (Côte d’Ivoire). The outbreak affected one-third of the group, killing four infants. To track its origin, we analysed rodents and wildlife carcasses from the region. We identified a MPXV-infected fire-footed rope squirrel (<i>Funisciurus pyrropus</i>), found dead 3 km from the mangabey territory 12 weeks before the outbreak. MPXV genomes from the squirrel and the mangabey were nearly identical. A video record from 2014 showed a mangabey from this group eating the same squirrel species and diet metabarcoding of faecal samples collected from mangabeys before the outbreak identified two samples containing fire-footed rope squirrel DNA. One of these samples was also the first positive for MPXV. This represents a rare case of direct detection of interspecies transmission. Our findings indicate that rope squirrels were the source of the MPXV outbreak in mangabeys. Because squirrels and non-human primates are hunted, traded and consumed by humans in West and Central Africa<sup><CitationRef CitationID="CR10">10</CitationRef>,<CitationRef CitationID="CR11">11</CitationRef></sup>, exposure to these animals probably represents risk for zoonotic transmission of MPXV.</p>

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Transmission of MPXV from fire-footed rope squirrels to sooty mangabeys

  • Carme Riutord-Fe,
  • Jasmin Schlotterbeck,
  • Lorenzo Lagostina,
  • Leonce Kouadio,
  • Harriet R. Herridge,
  • Moritz J. S. Jochum,
  • Nea Yves Noma,
  • Ane López-Morales,
  • Donata Hoffmann,
  • Sten Calvelage,
  • Hjalmar Kühl,
  • Alexander Mielke,
  • Catherine Crockford,
  • Liran Samuni,
  • Roman M. Wittig,
  • Martin Beer,
  • Sery Gonedelé-Bi,
  • Jan F. Gogarten,
  • Sébastien Calvignac-Spencer,
  • Ariane Düx,
  • Livia V. Patrono,
  • Fabian H. Leendertz

摘要

Mpox, caused by the monkeypox virus (MPXV; Orthopoxvirus monkeypox), is on the rise in West and Central Africa13. African rodents, especially squirrels, are suspected to be involved in MPXV emergence, but no evidence of a direct transmission to humans or non-human primates has been established49. Here we describe an outbreak of MPXV in a group of wild sooty mangabeys (Cercocebus atys) in Taï National Park (Côte d’Ivoire). The outbreak affected one-third of the group, killing four infants. To track its origin, we analysed rodents and wildlife carcasses from the region. We identified a MPXV-infected fire-footed rope squirrel (Funisciurus pyrropus), found dead 3 km from the mangabey territory 12 weeks before the outbreak. MPXV genomes from the squirrel and the mangabey were nearly identical. A video record from 2014 showed a mangabey from this group eating the same squirrel species and diet metabarcoding of faecal samples collected from mangabeys before the outbreak identified two samples containing fire-footed rope squirrel DNA. One of these samples was also the first positive for MPXV. This represents a rare case of direct detection of interspecies transmission. Our findings indicate that rope squirrels were the source of the MPXV outbreak in mangabeys. Because squirrels and non-human primates are hunted, traded and consumed by humans in West and Central Africa10,11, exposure to these animals probably represents risk for zoonotic transmission of MPXV.