Literature DB >> 15744574

New ecological aspects of hantavirus infection: a change of a paradigm and a challenge of prevention--a review.

Martin Zeier1, Michaela Handermann, Udo Bahr, Baldur Rensch, Sandra Müller, Roland Kehm, Walter Muranyi, Gholamreza Darai.   

Abstract

In the last decades a significant number of so far unknown or underestimated pathogens have emerged as fundamental health hazards of the human population despite intensive research and exceptional efforts of modern medicine to embank and eradicate infectious diseases. Almost all incidents caused by such emerging pathogens could be ascribed to agents that are zoonotic or expanded their host range and crossed species barriers. Many different factors influence the status of a pathogen to remain unnoticed or evolves into a worldwide threat. The ability of an infectious agent to adapt to changing environmental conditions and variations in human behavior, population development, nutrition, education, social, and health status are relevant factors affecting the correlation between pathogen and host. Hantaviruses belong to the emerging pathogens having gained more and more attention in the last decades. These viruses are members of the family Bunyaviridae and are grouped into a separate genus known as Hantavirus. The serotypes Hantaan (HTN), Seoul (SEO), Puumala (PUU), and Dobrava (DOB) virus predominantly cause hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS), a disease characterized by renal failure, hemorrhages, and shock. In the recent past, many hantavirus isolates have been identified and classified in hitherto unaffected geographic regions in the New World (North, Middle, and South America) with characteristic features affecting the lungs of infected individuals and causing an acute pulmonary syndrome. Hantavirus outbreaks in the United States of America at the beginning of the 10th decade of the last century fundamentally changed our knowledge about the appearance of the hantavirus specific clinical picture, mortality, origin, and transmission route in human beings. The hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS) was first recognized in 1993 in the Four Corners Region of the United States and had a lethality of more than 50%. Although the causative virus was first termed in connection with the geographic name of its outbreak region the analysis of the individual viruses indicate that the causing virus of HPS was a genetically distinct hantavirus and consequently termed as Sin Nombre virus. Hantaviruses are distributed worldwide and are assumed to share a long time period of co-evolution with specific rodent species as their natural reservoir. The degree of relatedness between virus serotypes normally coincides with the relatedness between their respective hosts. There are no known diseases that are associated with hantavirus infections in rodents underlining the amicable relationship between virus and host developed by mutual interaction in hundreds of thousands of years. Although rodents are the major reservoir, antibodies against hantaviruses are also present in domestic and wild animals like cats, dogs, pigs, cattle, and deer. Domestic animals and rodents live jointly in a similar habitat. Therefore the transmission of hantaviruses from rodents to domestic animals seems to be possible, if the target organs, tissues, and cell parenchyma of the co-habitat domestic animals possess adequate virus receptors and are suitable for hantavirus entry and replication. The most likely incidental infection of species other than rodents as for example humans turns hantaviruses from harmless to life-threatening pathogenic agents focusing the attention on this virus group, their ecology and evolution in order to prevent the human population from a serious health risk. Much more studies on the influence of non-natural hosts on the ecology of hantaviruses are needed to understand the directions that the hantavirus evolution could pursue. At least, domestic animals that share their environmental habitat with rodents and humans particularly in areas known as high endemic hantavirus regions have to be copiously screened. Each transfer of hantaviruses from their original natural hosts to other often incidental hosts is accompanied by a change of ecology, a change of environment, a modulation of numerous factors probably influencing the pathogenicity and virulence of the virus. The new environment exerts a modified evolutionary pressure on the virus forcing it to adapt and probably to adopt a form that is much more dangerous for other host species compared to the original one.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15744574     DOI: 10.1007/s11262-004-5625-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Virus Genes        ISSN: 0920-8569            Impact factor:   2.332


  174 in total

1.  Status of Hantavirus in the Central African Republic.

Authors:  J P Gonzalez; C C Mathiot; J C Bouquety; J M Diemer; L Guerre; J L Lesbordes; M C Madelon; A J Georges
Journal:  Ann Inst Pasteur Virol       Date:  1988 Jul-Sep

2.  Genetic investigation of novel hantaviruses causing fatal HPS in Brazil.

Authors:  A M Johnson; L T de Souza; I B Ferreira; L E Pereira; T G Ksiazek; P E Rollin; C J Peters; S T Nichol
Journal:  J Med Virol       Date:  1999-12       Impact factor: 2.327

Review 3.  Hantavirus.

Authors:  Sarah Hawes; John P Seabolt
Journal:  Clin Lab Sci       Date:  2003

Review 4.  Hantaviruses: a global disease problem.

Authors:  C Schmaljohn; B Hjelle
Journal:  Emerg Infect Dis       Date:  1997 Apr-Jun       Impact factor: 6.883

5.  Community-based prevalence profile of arboviral, rickettsial, and Hantaan-like viral antibody in the Nile River Delta of Egypt.

Authors:  A Corwin; M Habib; D Watts; M Darwish; J Olson; B Botros; R Hibbs; M Kleinosky; H W Lee; R Shope
Journal:  Am J Trop Med Hyg       Date:  1993-06       Impact factor: 2.345

6.  Utilization of autopsy RNA for the synthesis of the nucleocapsid antigen of a newly recognized virus associated with hantavirus pulmonary syndrome.

Authors:  H Feldmann; A Sanchez; S Morzunov; C F Spiropoulou; P E Rollin; T G Ksiazek; C J Peters; S T Nichol
Journal:  Virus Res       Date:  1993-12       Impact factor: 3.303

7.  Severe hemorrhagic complications from infection with nephropathia epidemica strain of Hantavirus.

Authors:  M Zeier; L Zöller; T Weinreich; E Padberg-Wolf; K Andrassy; E Ritz
Journal:  Clin Nephrol       Date:  1992-10       Impact factor: 0.975

8.  Characterization of Puumala virus nucleocapsid protein: identification of B-cell epitopes and domains involved in protective immunity.

Authors:  A Lundkvist; H Kallio-Kokko; K B Sjölander; H Lankinen; B Niklasson; A Vaheri; O Vapalahti
Journal:  Virology       Date:  1996-02-15       Impact factor: 3.616

9.  A retrospective analysis of sera collected by the Hemorrhagic Fever Commission during the Korean Conflict.

Authors:  J W LeDuc; T G Ksiazek; C A Rossi; J M Dalrymple
Journal:  J Infect Dis       Date:  1990-11       Impact factor: 5.226

10.  Nephropathia epidemica: detection of antigen in bank voles and serologic diagnosis of human infection.

Authors:  M Brummer-Korvenkontio; A Vaheri; T Hovi; C H von Bonsdorff; J Vuorimies; T Manni; K Penttinen; N Oker-Blom; J Lähdevirta
Journal:  J Infect Dis       Date:  1980-02       Impact factor: 5.226

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  47 in total

1.  Seoul virus infection in a Wisconsin patient with recent travel to China, March 2009: first documented case in the Midwestern United States.

Authors:  Carrie F Nielsen; Vishal Sethi; Andrew E Petroll; James Kazmierczak; Bobbie R Erickson; Stuart T Nichol; Pierre E Rollin; Jeffrey P Davis
Journal:  Am J Trop Med Hyg       Date:  2010-12       Impact factor: 2.345

2.  Characterization of a new Puumala virus genotype associated with hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome.

Authors:  Udo Bahr; Martin Zeier; Walter Muranyi
Journal:  Virus Genes       Date:  2006-10       Impact factor: 2.332

3.  Hantavirus infection: a neglected diagnosis in thrombocytopenia and fever?

Authors:  Barbara Denecke; Boris Bigalke; Michael Haap; Dietrich Overkamp; Hendrik Lehnert; Christian S Haas
Journal:  Mayo Clin Proc       Date:  2010-11       Impact factor: 7.616

4.  Dynamics of hantavirus infection in Peromyscus leucopus of central Pennsylvania.

Authors:  Lien T Luong; Beth A Vigliotti; Shelley Campbell; James A Comer; James N Mills; Peter J Hudson
Journal:  Vector Borne Zoonotic Dis       Date:  2011-07-14       Impact factor: 2.133

Review 5.  Landscape, Climate and Hantavirus Cardiopulmonary Syndrome Outbreaks.

Authors:  Paula Ribeiro Prist; Paulo Sérgio D Andrea; Jean Paul Metzger
Journal:  Ecohealth       Date:  2017-06-15       Impact factor: 3.184

6.  The assessment of Hantaan virus-specific antibody responses after the immunization program for hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome in northwest China.

Authors:  Zhuo Li; Hanyu Zeng; Ying Wang; Yusi Zhang; Linfeng Cheng; Fanglin Zhang; Yingfeng Lei; Boquan Jin; Ying Ma; Lihua Chen
Journal:  Hum Vaccin Immunother       Date:  2016-11-08       Impact factor: 3.452

Review 7.  Global Diversity and Distribution of Hantaviruses and Their Hosts.

Authors:  Matthew T Milholland; Iván Castro-Arellano; Gerardo Suzán; Gabriel E Garcia-Peña; Thomas E Lee; Rodney E Rohde; A Alonso Aguirre; James N Mills
Journal:  Ecohealth       Date:  2018-04-30       Impact factor: 3.184

8.  Specific humoral reaction of hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS) patients in China to recombinant nucleocapsid proteins from European hantaviruses.

Authors:  H-R Xiong; Q Li; W Chen; D-Y Liu; J-X Ling; J Liu; Y-J Liu; Y Zhang; Z-Q Yang
Journal:  Eur J Clin Microbiol Infect Dis       Date:  2011-01-08       Impact factor: 3.267

9.  Revisiting the genetic diversity of emerging hantaviruses circulating in Europe using a pan-viral resequencing microarray.

Authors:  Claudia Filippone; Guillaume Castel; Séverine Murri; Myriam Ermonval; Misa Korva; Tatjana Avšič-Županc; Tarja Sironen; Olli Vapalahati; Lorraine M McElhinney; Rainer G Ulrich; Martin H Groschup; Valérie Caro; Frank Sauvage; Sylvie van der Werf; Jean-Claude Manuguerra; Antoine Gessain; Philippe Marianneau; Noël Tordo
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2019-08-27       Impact factor: 4.379

10.  Interaction between the environment and animals in urban settings: integrated and participatory planning.

Authors:  Elvira Tarsitano
Journal:  Environ Manage       Date:  2006-09-02       Impact factor: 3.266

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