DNA Viruses

Reactivation of lymphocryptovirus (Epstein–Barr virus chimpanzee) and dominance in chimpanzees

  • Correspondence
    Takafumi Ishida
    tishida{at}biol.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp
  • Journal of General Virology 2010; 91(8):2049–2053 · https://doi.org/10.1099/vir.0.022376-0

    View at publisher PubMed

    Abstract

    Nine male chimpanzees originally reared in solitary cages were set up to form a group. Plasma viral load of the lymphocryptovirus (LCV) of chimpanzee [Epstein–Barr virus chimpanzee (EBVcmp)] was measured by real-time PCR. In the group formation (Form) period, the first-ranking male showed an imminent increase in plasma EBVcmp load compared with 1 week before (pre-Form) and 3 months after (post-Form) group formation. Other upper-ranking males such as the second-, third- and fourth-male also showed the highest level of viral load in the Form period. The kinetics of EBVcmp load in the Form period were statistically different from other periods (against pre-Form, t=−4.878, P<0.001; against post-Form, t=6.434, P<0.001). The effect of the male dominance rank did not differ between the pre-Form and post-Form periods (t=−1.557, P=0.12). Reactivation of LCV (EBV) as an immunological stress marker for humans might also be applied to chimpanzees.