Variation in predicted COVID-19 risk among lemurs and lorises

0 views • Nov 7, 2021
0
Save
Cite
Share

Author(s)

Author Name

Amanda D Melin

Published 2 Projects

Genetics

Joseph D Orkin

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Mareike C Janiak

Published 2 Projects

Genetics

Alejandro Valenzuela

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Lukas FK Kuderna

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Frank Marrone

Published 2 Projects

Genetics

Hasinala Ramangason

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Julie E Horvath

Christian Roos

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Andrew C. Kitchener

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Chiea-Chuen Khor

Published 2 Projects

Genetics Genetic And Genomic Medicine

Weng Khong Lim

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Jessica GH Lee

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Patrick Tan

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Govindhaswamy Umapathy

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Muthuswamy Raveendran

Published 1 Project

Genetics

R. Alan Harris

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Ivo Glynne Gut

Marta Gut

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Esther Lizano

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Tilo Nadler

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Dietmar Zinner

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Steig E Johnson

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Erich D. Jarvis

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Olivier Fedrigo

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Dongdong Wu

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Guojie Zhang

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Kyle Kai-How Farh

Published 2 Projects

Genetics

Jeffrey Rogers

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Tomas Marques-Bonet

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Arcadi Navarro

Published 1 Project

Genetics

David Juan

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Paramjit S Arora

Published 2 Projects

Genetics

Add New Author

The novel coronavirus SARS-CoV-2, which in humans leads to the disease COVID-19, has caused global disruption and more than 1.5 million fatalities since it first emerged in late 2019. As we write, infection rates are currently at their highest point globally and are rising extremely rapidly in some areas due to more infectious variants. The primary viral target is the cellular receptor angiotensin-converting enzyme-2 (ACE2). Recent sequence analyses of the ACE2 gene predicts that many nonhuman primates are also likely to be highly susceptible to infection. However, the anticipated risk is not equal across the Order. Furthermore, some taxonomic groups show high ACE2 amino acid conservation, while others exhibit high variability at this locus. As an example of the latter, analyses of strepsirrhine primate ACE2 sequences to date indicate large variation among lemurs and lorises compared to other primate clades despite low sampling effort. Here, we report ACE2 gene and protein sequences for 71 individual strepsirrhines, spanning 51 species and 19 genera. Our study reinforces previous results and finds additional variability in other strepsirrhine species, and suggests several clades of lemurs have high potential susceptibility to SARS-CoV-2 infection. Troublingly, some species, including the rare and Endangered aye-aye (Daubentonia madagascariensis), as well as those in the genera Avahi and Propithecus, may be at high risk. Given that lemurs are endemic to Madagascar and among the primates at highest risk of extinction globally, further understanding of the potential threat of COVID-19 to their health should be a conservation priority. All feasible actions should be taken to limit their exposure to SARS-CoV-2.

Genetics
Genetics 59 Projects