| Literature DB >> 30208582 |
Christina M Lazov1, Mariann Chriél2, Hans J Baagøe3, Esben Fjederholt4, Yu Deng5,6, Engbert A Kooi7, Graham J Belsham8, Anette Bøtner9, Thomas Bruun Rasmussen10.
Abstract
Bat populations harbour a multitude of viruses; some of these are pathogenic or potentially pathogenic in other animals or humans. Therefore, it is important to monitor the populations and characterize these viruses. In this study, the presence of coronaviruses (CoVs) in different species of Danish bats was investigated using active surveillance at different geographical locations in Denmark. Faecal samples were screened for the presence of CoVs using pan-CoV real-time RT-PCR assays. The amplicons, obtained from five different species of bats, were sequenced. Phylogenetic analysis revealed a species-specific clustering with the samples from Myotis daubentonii, showing a close resemblance to coronavirus sequences obtained from the same species of bat in Germany and the United Kingdom. Our results show, for the first time, that multiple, distinct alphacoronaviruses are present in the Danish bat populations.Entities:
Keywords: Europe; Vespertilionidae; coronavirus; host restriction; nucleotide sequencing; phylogenetic analysis
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30208582 PMCID: PMC6163574 DOI: 10.3390/v10090486
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Faecal sample collection details for the detection of coronaviruses in Danish bats.
| Bat Species | No. Sampled (No. Positive) | Collection Date | Collection Location | Sample Types |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 4 (0) | September 2013 | Vesløs | 2 individuals and 2 from nest box |
| 40 (8) | October 2013 | Mønsted | Individual | |
| 53 (9) | October 2014 | Mønsted | Individual | |
| 4 (1) | April 2015 | Mønsted | Individual | |
| 10 (6) | October 2015 | Mønsted | Individual | |
| 11 (6) | November 2015 | Mønsted | Individual | |
| 5 (0) | May 2016 | Mønsted | Individual | |
| 58 (13) | September 2016 | Mønsted | Individual | |
| 2 (0) | April 2017 | Mønsted | Individual | |
|
| 2 (0) | October 2013 | Mønsted | Individual |
| 6 (0) | October 2014 | Mønsted | Individual | |
| 2 (1) | April 2015 | Mønsted | Individual | |
| 1 (1) | November 2015 | Mønsted | Individual | |
| 6 (1) | September 2016 | Mønsted | Individual | |
| 2 (2) | November 2016 | Mønsted | Individual | |
|
| 7 (0) | August–September 2013 | Bornholm | Individual |
| 1 (0) | September 2013 | Lolland, Agerup forest | Individual | |
| 2 (1) | October 2014 | Mønsted | Individual | |
| 1 (0) | September 2016 | Mønsted | Individual | |
|
| 4 (0) | August 2013 | Bornholm | Individual |
| 2 (0) | August 2015 | Bornholm | 1 individual and 1 from nest box | |
| 3 (0) | August 2016 | Bornholm | 3 nest boxes | |
| 2 (0) | September 2017 | Bornholm | Individual | |
|
| 1 (0) | August 2013 | Bornholm | Individual |
| 1 (0) | August 2016 | Bornholm | Individual | |
|
| 2 (0) | August 2013 | Bornholm | Individual |
| 1 (0) | April 2015 | Mønsted | Individual | |
|
| 4 (0) | August 2013 | Bornholm | 2 individual samples and 2 from nest boxes |
|
| 6 (1) | August 2013 | Funen, Sollerup forest | Individual |
| 9 (1) | June 2014 | Vadum | Mix of individual samples and floor samples from colony | |
| 1 (0) | Summer 2015 | Sorø | Sample from nest box | |
| 8 (4) | September 2015 | Borup | 5 individual samples, 3 from floor | |
| 1 (0) | September–October 2015 | Helsinge | Sample from abandoned colony | |
| 3 (0) | August 2016 | Tureby | From colony | |
|
| 1 (0) | August 2013 | Bornholm | Individual |
| 1 (0) | September–October 2015 | Bornholm | Sample from floor | |
|
| 3 (3) | June 2014 | Tim | 1 individual sample, 2 from floor |
| 1 (0) | June 2017 | Sakskøbing | Sample from floor |
Figure 1Locations of sampling in Denmark and the sampled bat species. The number of samples collected from each bat species is listed with the number of positive samples shown in parenthesis. (Red) Mønsted, sampled species: Myotis daubentonii 183 (43), Myotis dasycneme 19 (5), Myotis nattereri 3 (1), Myotis brandtii 1 (0). (Purple) Locations with positive soprano pipistrelle samples, sampled species: Pipistrellus pygmaeus 23 (6). (Orange) Location with positive serotine bat samples, sampled species: Eptesicus serotinus 3 (3). (Blue) Bornholm, only negative samples, sampled species: Myotis nattereri 7 (0), Myotis bechsteinii 11 (0), Myotis mystacinus 2 (0), Myotis brandtii 2 (0), Nyctalus noctula 4 (0), Plecotus auritus 2 (0). (Green) Other locations with only negative samples, sampled species: Myotis daubentonii 4 (0), Myotis nattereri 1 (0), Pipistrellus pygmaeus 5 (0), Eptesicus serotinus 1 (0). Graphics edited from Wikimedia user NordNordWest published under the conditions of GNU Free Documentation License Version 1.2 or later.
Coronavirus prevalence in the samples from different bat species in Denmark.
| Bat Species | Total No. Sampled (No. Positive) | Observed Coronavirus Prevalence in Samples | 95% Confidence Interval of Sample Mean |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 187 (43) | 23% | [0.17; 0.29] |
|
| 19 (5) | 26% | [0.07; 0.46] |
|
| 11 (1) | 9% | [0.00; 0.26] |
|
| 11 (0) | 0% | NA 1 |
|
| 2 (0) | 0% | NA |
|
| 3 (0) | 0% | NA |
|
| 4 (0) | 0% | NA |
|
| 28 (6) | 21% | [0.06; 0.37] |
|
| 2 (0) | 0% | NA |
|
| 4 (3) | 75% | [0.33; 1.00] |
| Total (all species) | 271 (58) | 21% | [0.17; 0.26] |
1 NA: not applicable.
Figure 2Phylogenetic tree of Danish bat coronavirus sequences. The tree was constructed based on sequenced RT-PCR amplicons from the screening assay C (208 bp without primer sequence [11]). The minimum bootstrap value was set to 50. The Danish CoV sequences are shown in species-specific colours. The distance bar in the bottom left corner indicates the number of nucleotide differences per site.
Figure 3Phylogenetic tree of Danish bat coronavirus sequences. The tree was constructed based on an alignment of 381 bp length references and sequenced RT-PCR amplicons from assay A [12]. The minimum bootstrap value was set to 50. The Danish CoV sequences are shown in pink. The distance bar in the bottom left corner indicates the number of nucleotide differences per site.
Figure 4Predicted amino acid sequences derived from the sequenced RT-PCR products of the Danish bat coronaviruses tested with assays A, B, and C. The amino acid sequences are arbitrarily numbered and named according to the sampled bat host species and RT-PCR assay. The most closely related reference sequence Scotophilus bat coronavirus 512 NC_009657 was selected for comparison with the Danish coronavirus predicted amino acid sequences. Numbers refer to amino acid numbers of the annotated gp1 (ORF1ab) of the reference sequence.