| Literature DB >> 27551536 |
N Allocati1, A G Petrucci1, P Di Giovanni2, M Masulli1, C Di Ilio3, V De Laurenzi3.
Abstract
Bats are natural reservoir hosts and sources of infection of several microorganisms, many of which cause severe human diseases. Because of contact between bats and other animals, including humans, the possibility exists for additional interspecies transmissions and resulting disease outbreaks. The purpose of this article is to supply an overview on the main pathogens isolated from bats that have the potential to cause disease in humans.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27551536 PMCID: PMC4979447 DOI: 10.1038/cddiscovery.2016.48
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Death Discov ISSN: 2058-7716
Figure 1Bacchantes – Les Minéides. Illustration de Les Métamorphoses d’Ovide. Modified from Jean Mathieu, graveur; Ovide, auteur du texte. Editeur: veuve Langelier (Paris) – 1619. Source: gallica.bnf.fr – Bibliothèque nationale de France.
Figure 2Satan. Modified from Dante Alighieri’s Inferno from the Original by Dante Alighieri and illustrated with the designs of Gustave Doré – 1861. Source: commons.wikimedia.org.
Overview of bat-associated infectious agents with zoonotic potential
| Rhabdoviridae | |||
| Rabies virus | Acute fatal encephalitis | Yes | Johnson |
| European Bat Lyssavirus type 1 | Acute fatal encephalitis | Yes | McElhinney |
| European Bat Lyssavirus type 2 | Acute fatal encephalitis | Yes | McElhinney |
| Bokeloh Bat Lyssavirus | No | Freuling | |
| West Caucasian Bat virus | No | Kuzmin | |
| Lleida Bat Lyssavirus | No | Aréchiga Ceballos | |
| Australian Bat Lyssavirus | Acute fatal encephalitis | Yes | Weir |
| Aravan virus | No | Banyard | |
| Khujand virus | No | Banyard | |
| Irkut virus | Acute fatal encephalitis | Yes | Banyard |
| Lagos Bat Virus | No | Banyard | |
| Duvenhage virus | Acute fatal encephalitis | Yes | Banyard |
| Shimoni bat virus | No | Banyard | |
| Filoviridae | |||
| | Ebola haemorrhagic fever | Yes | Olival and Hayman[ |
| | Marburg haemorrhagic fever | Yes | Olival and Hayman[ |
| Coronaviridae | |||
| SARS-CoV | Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome | Yes (palm civets, raccoon dogs) | Drexler |
| MERS-CoV | Middle Eastern Respiratory Syndrome | Yes (camels) | Drexler |
| Paramyxoviridae | |||
| | Nipah disease (severe encephalitis) | Yes (pigs) | Clayton |
| | Hendra disease (fatal respiratory disease) | Yes (horses) | Clayton |
| Orthomyxoviridae | |||
| | Respiratory tract infections | No | Freidl |
| Bunyaviridae | |||
| | Fatal hemorrhagic fever | No | Holmes and Zhang[ |
| Reoviridae | |||
| Mammalian orthoreovirus | Enteric and respiratory infections | Unclear | Wang |
| | Endocarditis | Unclear | Veikkolainen |
| | Systemic infections | No | Mühldorfer[ |
| | Systemic infections | Unclear | Vashi |
| | Salmonellosis | No | Mühldorfer[ |
| | Several illnesses | No | Mühldorfer[ |
| | Pulmonary and systemic infections | Unclear | Santos |
Via intermediate host as indicated.
Figure 3Schematic representation of Ebola virus transmission. Bats are the potential source of the virus. Infected bats can directly or through intermediate hosts spread the infection to humans. Human-to-human transmission can then result in epidemics.