Characterization of Diverse Anelloviruses, Cressdnaviruses, and Bacteriophages in the Human Oral DNA Virome from North Carolina (USA)

Viruses. 2023 Aug 26;15(9):1821. doi: 10.3390/v15091821.

Abstract

The diversity of viruses identified from the various niches of the human oral cavity-from saliva to dental plaques to the surface of the tongue-has accelerated in the age of metagenomics. This rapid expansion demonstrates that our understanding of oral viral diversity is incomplete, with only a few studies utilizing passive drool collection in conjunction with metagenomic sequencing methods. For this pilot study, we obtained 14 samples from healthy staff members working at the Duke Lemur Center (Durham, NC, USA) to determine the viral diversity that can be identified in passive drool samples from humans. The complete genomes of 3 anelloviruses, 9 cressdnaviruses, 4 Caudoviricetes large bacteriophages, 29 microviruses, and 19 inoviruses were identified in this study using high-throughput sequencing and viral metagenomic workflows. The results presented here expand our understanding of the vertebrate-infecting and microbe-infecting viral diversity of the human oral virome in North Carolina (USA).

Keywords: Anelloviridae; Caudoviricetes; Cressdnaviricota; Inoviridae; Microviridae; Redondoviridae; passive drool.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Anelloviridae*
  • Animals
  • Bacteriophages*
  • DNA
  • Humans
  • Lemur*
  • North Carolina
  • Pilot Projects
  • Virome

Substances

  • DNA

Grants and funding

The work described here was supported by TriCEM (Triangle Center for Evolutionary Medicine), Duke Biology, Duke Lemur Center, and Sigma Xi grants awarded to E.N.P.