| Literature DB >> 34578350 |
Anthony R Fooks1, Rebecca Shipley1, Wanda Markotter2, Noël Tordo3, Conrad M Freuling4, Thomas Müller4, Lorraine M McElhinney1, Ashley C Banyard1, Charles E Rupprecht5.
Abstract
Pathogen discovery contributes to our knowledge of bat-borne viruses and is linked to the heightened interest globally in bats as recognised reservoirs of zoonotic agents. The transmission of lyssaviruses from bats-to-humans, domestic animals, or other wildlife species is uncommon, but interest in these pathogens remains due to their ability to cause an acute, progressive, invariably fatal encephalitis in humans. Consequently, the detection and characterisation of bat lyssaviruses continues to expand our knowledge of their phylogroup definition, viral diversity, host species association, geographical distribution, evolution, mechanisms for perpetuation, and the potential routes of transmission. Although the opportunity for lyssavirus cross-species transmission seems rare, adaptation in a new host and the possibility of onward transmission to humans requires continued investigation. Considering the limited efficacy of available rabies biologicals it is important to further our understanding of protective immunity to minimize the threat from these pathogens to public health. Hence, in addition to increased surveillance, the development of a niche pan-lyssavirus vaccine or therapeutic biologics for post-exposure prophylaxis for use against genetically divergent lyssaviruses should be an international priority as these emerging lyssaviruses remain a concern for global public health.Entities:
Keywords: bats; emerging; encephalitis; lyssavirus; novel; prophylaxis; rabies; zoonoses
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34578350 PMCID: PMC8472001 DOI: 10.3390/v13091769
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Figure 1Phylogenetic reconstruction by inference of nucleoprotein gene sequences of lyssaviruses using the Neighbour-Joining method. The percentage of replicate trees in which the associated taxa clustered together in the bootstrap test (1000 replicates) are shown next to the branches. The GenBank accession numbers are indicated for each sequence. The evolutionary distances were computed using the Maximum Composite Likelihood method and are in the units of the number of base substitutions per site. Phylogenetic tree was generated in MEGA 6.
Figure 2Antigenic cartography maps to show the antigenic distances of the lyssaviruses. (A) Three-dimensional antigenic map showing the antigenic relationship between lyssaviruses. Viruses (spheres) and, sera (translucent coloured boxes) are positioned such that the distance from each serum to each virus is determined by the neutralisation titre. Multidimensional scaling is used to position both sera and viruses relative to each other, so orientation of the map within the axes is free. The scale bar represents 1 AU (antigenic unit), equivalent to a two-fold dilution in antibody titre. Phylogroup I lyssaviruses are coloured green, CVS-11 coloured dark blue [Challenge virus standard-11 strain of RABV, used routinely in diagnostic assays], cSN [cDNA clone of the SN strain of RABV derived from the RABV strain, SAD B19] coloured light blue, Phylogroup II lyssaviruses coloured orange, and Phylogroup III lyssaviruses coloured red. (B) Antigenic map with sera removed for clarity. (C) Antigenic map, rotated to a different orientation and sera removed for clarity. (D) Antigenic map, rotated to a different orientation and sera removed for clarity.
21st century occurrence of the proposed ‘phylogroup III’ lyssavirus species.
| Lyssavirus Species | Mammalian Isolate | Reservoir Species Associated with Lyssavirus Infection | Year of Isolation | Countries Reporting ‘Phylogroup III’ Lyssaviruses | Region |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| West Caucasian bat lyssavirus (WCBV) | Schreibers’ long-fingered bat (also known as the common bent-wing bat) |
| 2002 | Russian Federation | Eurasia |
| Ikoma lyssavirus (IKOV) | African civet ( | * Not known | 2009 | Tanzania | East Africa |
| Lleida bat lyssavirus (LLEBV) | Schreibers’ long-fingered bat |
| 2011 | Spain | Western Europe |
| Lleida bat lyssavirus (LLEBV) | Schreibers’ long-fingered bat |
| 2017 | France | Western Europe |
| West Caucasian bat lyssavirus (WCBV) | Domestic cat ( | Suspected | 2020 | Italy | Western Europe |
| Matlo bat lyssavirus (MBLV) | Natal long-fingered bat |
| 2015–2016 | Republic of South Africa | Southern Africa |
* Virus neutralizing antibodies detected from Miniopterus species bats in Kenya reported during 2006–2007 [38].