| Literature DB >> 26831932 |
Sabrina Schmidt1, Moritz Saxenhofer2,3, Stephan Drewes1, Mathias Schlegel1,4, Konrad M Wanka1, Raphael Frank5, Sven Klimpel5, Felix von Blanckenhagen6, Denny Maaz7, Christiane Herden8, Jona Freise9, Ronny Wolf10, Michael Stubbe11, Peter Borkenhagen12, Hermann Ansorge13, Jana A Eccard14, Johannes Lang15, Elsa Jourdain16, Jens Jacob17, Philippe Marianneau18, Gerald Heckel2,3, Rainer G Ulrich19.
Abstract
Tula virus (TULV) is a vole-associated hantavirus with low or no pathogenicity to humans. In the present study, 686 common voles (Microtus arvalis), 249 field voles (Microtus agrestis) and 30 water voles (Arvicola spec.) were collected at 79 sites in Germany, Luxembourg and France and screened by RT-PCR and TULV-IgG ELISA. TULV-specific RNA and/or antibodies were detected at 43 of the sites, demonstrating a geographically widespread distribution of the virus in the studied area. The TULV prevalence in common voles (16.7 %) was higher than that in field voles (9.2 %) and water voles (10.0 %). Time series data at ten trapping sites showed evidence of a lasting presence of TULV RNA within common vole populations for up to 34 months, although usually at low prevalence. Phylogenetic analysis demonstrated a strong genetic structuring of TULV sequences according to geography and independent of the rodent species, confirming the common vole as the preferential host, with spillover infections to co-occurring field and water voles. TULV phylogenetic clades showed a general association with evolutionary lineages in the common vole as assessed by mitochondrial DNA sequences on a large geographical scale, but with local-scale discrepancies in the contact areas.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26831932 DOI: 10.1007/s00705-016-2762-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Virol ISSN: 0304-8608 Impact factor: 2.574