2018
DOI: 10.1128/mbio.01354-17
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Viral Diversity of House Mice in New York City

Abstract: The microbiome of wild Mus musculus (house mouse), a globally distributed invasive pest that resides in close contact with humans in urban centers, is largely unexplored. Here, we report analysis of the fecal virome of house mice in residential buildings in New York City, NY. Mice were collected at seven sites in Manhattan, Queens, Brooklyn, and the Bronx over a period of 1 year. Unbiased high-throughput sequencing of feces revealed 36 viruses from 18 families and 21 genera, including at least 6 novel viruses … Show more

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Cited by 108 publications
(150 citation statements)
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“…This latter case represents one example of the successful integration of urban evolutionary ecology and conservation and could be used as a model for other urban conservation efforts. seek to understand how rat movements, interactions with native rodent species, and pest management strategies affect not only evolution in rats, but also the diversity and evolution of known and potentially emerging human pathogens, which are remarkably diverse and a potential threat to human health (Firth et al, 2014;Lee et al, 2018;Williams et al, 2018). These types of considerations represent an important avenue for future research in not just rodents, but any urban pest, such as black widow spiders , mosquitoes (Byrne & Nichols, 1999), invasive plants (Arredondo, Marchini, & Cruzan, 2018), and others.…”
Section: Conservationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This latter case represents one example of the successful integration of urban evolutionary ecology and conservation and could be used as a model for other urban conservation efforts. seek to understand how rat movements, interactions with native rodent species, and pest management strategies affect not only evolution in rats, but also the diversity and evolution of known and potentially emerging human pathogens, which are remarkably diverse and a potential threat to human health (Firth et al, 2014;Lee et al, 2018;Williams et al, 2018). These types of considerations represent an important avenue for future research in not just rodents, but any urban pest, such as black widow spiders , mosquitoes (Byrne & Nichols, 1999), invasive plants (Arredondo, Marchini, & Cruzan, 2018), and others.…”
Section: Conservationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although these results are of importance, mammals and birds represent only a small proportion (less than 25%) of total number of vertebrates, and little is known about the natural viromes of the vast number of vertebrate species. Indeed, recent metagenomic studies [6][7][8][9][10][11] suggest that our understanding of the true biodiversity and evolution of vertebrate RNA viruses is limited, fragmentary and biased.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This boom focussed first on viruses likely to infect us and our livestock, particularly the virome of mammalian faeces (e.g. Williams et al 2018), putative disease reservoirs such as bats (e.g. Berto et al 2018;Zheng et al 2018), and arbovirus vectors (e.g.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%