| Literature DB >> 30952778 |
Ellen G Murphy1,2, Nicola J Williams1,2, Malcolm Bennett3, Daisy Jennings4, Julian Chantrey5, Lorraine M McElhinney1,4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Hantaviruses are maintained by mammalian hosts, such as rodents, and are shed in their excretions. Clinical disease can occur in humans from spillover infection. Brown rats (Rattus norvegicus) are the globally distributed reservoir host of Seoul virus (SEOV). Human cases of SEOV-associated haemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (SEOV-HFRS)have been reported in Great Britain (GB) since 1977.Entities:
Keywords: disease surveillance; epidemiology; infectious diseases; virology; wildlife; zoonoses
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30952778 PMCID: PMC6582813 DOI: 10.1136/vr.105249
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Rec ISSN: 0042-4900 Impact factor: 2.695
Figure 1Locations of sites at which rat (Rattus norvegicus) samples were collected and correspond to table 1. Letters correspond to the sites which rats were collected and stars indicate the sites where hantavirus Seoul virus (SEOV)-positive rats were detected. This map was created using GQIS Desktop V.3.2.3 software.
Hantavirus infection in brown rats using a pan-hantavirus RT-PCR assay
| Year | Site and map ID | Site type | Location | Hantavirus positive (%) | |
| 2014 | A | Dairy farm | Cheshire | 5 | 0/5 (0)* |
| 2015 | B | Beef farm | Derbyshire | 1 | 0/1 (0)* |
| 2015 | C | Beef farm | Cheshire | 6 | 0/6 (0)* |
| 2015 | D | Smallholding | Denbighshire | 1 | 0/1 (0)* |
| 2015 | E | Urban | Merseyside | 4 | 0/4 (0)* |
| 2015 | F | Residential | Cheshire | 4 | 0/4 (0)* |
| 2015 | G | Pig Farm | North Yorkshire | 16 | 2/16 (12.5) |
| 2015–2016 | H | Pig farm | Cheshire | 10 | 3/10 (30) |
| 2015 | I | Pig farm | East Yorkshire | 1 | 0/1 (0) |
| 2015 | J | Road kill | East Yorkshire | 1 | 1/1 (100) |
| 2015 | K | Pig farm | East Yorkshire | 2 | 0/2 (0) |
| 2015 | L | Pig farm | North Yorkshire | 1 | 1/1 (100) |
| 2015 | M | Pig farm | West Yorkshire | 16 | 6/16 (37.5) |
| Total | 68 | 13/68 (19) |
PCR was performed on lung and kidney tissues except those marked by asterisks.
*Tested using only kidney tissue.
Figure 2Phylogenetic tree of Seoul virus (SEOV) sequences including those detected in this study and other strains detected in Great Britain (GB). The evolutionary history was inferred by using the maximum likelihood method based on the Tamura 3-parameter model plus gamma.19 The analysis involved 47 nucleotide sequences (published and sequences from this study) of a partial 329 nt fragment on the L-segment. Sequences from this study are shown with a blue dot with the corresponding GenBank accession numbers. Bootstrap values of at least 70 are shown. Evolutionary analyses were conducted in MEGA7.18