Link between Monkeypox Virus Genomes from Museum Specimens and 1965 Zoo Outbreak
More On Article
- HEAS member Mathias Mehofer awarded a 3-year project grant on medieval metallurgy
- Tracing 2500 years of human betaherpesvirus 6A and 6B diversity through ancient DNA.
- New collagen peptide markers from New Guinea fauna: identifying archaeological bone in the tropics
- New FWF Podcast 'Was Wir Wissen' Launched
- HEAS Members Awarded FWF Grant for a Project on “Beyond the Burial”
Hämmerle, M., Rymbekova, A., Gelabert, P., Sawyer, S., Cheronet, O., Bernardi, P., Calvignac-Spencer, S., Kuhlwilm, M., Guellil, M., Pinhasi, R., 2024. Link between Monkeypox Virus Genomes from Museum Specimens and 1965 Zoo Outbreak. Emerging Infectious Disease journal 30, 815.
Abstract
We used pathogen genomics to test orangutan specimens from a museum in Bonn, Germany, to identify the origin of the animals and the circumstances of their death. We found monkeypox virus genomes in the samples and determined that they represent cases from a 1965 outbreak at Rotterdam Zoo in Rotterdam, the Netherlands.