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Bat virome

The bat virome is the group of viruses associated with bats. Bats host a diverse array of viruses, including all seven types described by the Baltimore classification system: (I) double-stranded DNA viruses; (II) single-stranded DNA viruses; (III) double-stranded RNA viruses; (IV) positive-sense single-stranded RNA viruses; (V) negative-sense single-stranded RNA viruses; (VI) positive-sense single-stranded RNA viruses that replicate through a DNA intermediate; and (VII) double-stranded DNA viruses that replicate through a single-stranded RNA intermediate. The greatest share of bat-associated viruses identified as of 2020 are of type IV, in the family Coronaviridae.

A scientist swabs the muzzle of a tricolored bat in a cave in Tennessee

Bats harbor several viruses that are zoonotic, or capable of infecting humans, and some bat-borne viruses are considered important emerging viruses.[1][2] These zoonotic viruses include the rabies virus, SARS-CoV, MERS-CoV, Marburg virus, Nipah virus, and Hendra virus. While research clearly indicates that SARS-CoV-2 originated in bats,[3] it is unknown how it was transmitted to humans, or if an intermediate host was involved. It has been speculated that bats may have a role in the ecology of the Ebola virus, though this is unconfirmed. While transmission of rabies from bats to humans usually occurs via biting, most other zoonotic bat viruses are transmitted by direct contact with infected bat fluids like urine, guano, or saliva, or through contact with an infected, non-bat intermediate host. There is no firm evidence that butchering or consuming bat meat can lead to viral transmission, though this has been speculated.

Despite the abundance of viruses associated with bats, they rarely become ill from viral infections, and rabies is the only viral illness known to kill bats. Much research has been conducted on bat virology, particularly bat immune response. Bats' immune systems differ from other mammals in their lack of several inflammasomes, which activate the body's inflammatory response, as well as a dampened stimulator of interferon genes (STING) response, which helps control host response to pathogens. Preliminary evidence indicates bats are thus more tolerant of infection than other mammals. While much research has centered on bats as a source of zoonotic disease, reviews have found mixed results on whether bats harbor more zoonotic viruses than other groups. A 2015 review found that bats do not harbor more zoonotic viruses than primates or rodents, though the three groups harbored more than other mammal orders.[4] In contrast, a 2020 review found that bats do not have more zoonotic viruses than any other bird or mammal group when viral diversity is measured relative to host diversity, as bats are the second-most diverse order of mammals.[5]

Viral diversity

Number of viral sequences detected in bats by virus family as of 2020[6]
Virus family No. sequences (n = 10,845)
Coronaviridae
3,796(35.0%)
Rhabdoviridae
2,890(26.6%)
Paramyxoviridae
1,025(9.5%)
Astroviridae
724(6.7%)
Adenoviridae
365(3.4%)
Polyomaviridae
302(2.8%)
Reoviridae
288(2.7%)
Circoviridae
250(2.3%)
Herpesviridae
233(2.1%)
Flaviviridae
218(2.0%)
Picornaviridae
181(1.7%)
Parvoviridae
165(1.5%)
Filoviridae
123(1.1%)
Hepadnaviridae
78(< 1.0%)
Papillomaviridae
59(< 1.0%)
Hantaviridae
59(<1.0%)
Caliciviridae
43(< 1.0%)
Peribunyaviridae
31(< 1.0%)
Nairoviridae
22(< 1.0%)
Retroviridae
18(< 1.0%)
Orthomyxoviridae
8(< 1.0%)
Phenuiviridae
8(< 1.0%)
Poxviridae
6(< 1.0%)
Picobirnaviridae
4(< 1.0%)
Togaviridae
3(< 1.0%)
Genomoviridae
2(< 1.0%)
Bornaviridae
2(< 1.0%)
Anelloviridae
1(< 1.0%)

Viruses have been found in bat populations around the world. Bats harbor all groups of viruses in the Baltimore classification,[7] representing at least 28 families of viruses.[6] Most of the viruses harbored by bats are RNA viruses, though they are also known to have DNA viruses.[8] Bats are more tolerant of viruses than terrestrial mammals.[8] A single bat can host several different kinds of viruses without becoming ill.[9] Bats have also been shown to be more susceptible to reinfection with the same viruses, whereas other mammals, especially humans, have a greater propensity for developing varying degrees of immunity.[10][11] Their behavior and life history also make them "exquisitely suitable hosts of viruses and other disease agents", with long lifespans, the ability to enter torpor or hibernate, and their ability to traverse landscapes with daily and seasonal movement.[1]

Though bats harbor diverse viruses, they are rarely lethal to the bat host. Only the rabies virus and a few other lyssaviruses have been confirmed to kill bats.[7] Various factors have been implicated in bats' ability to survive viral infections. One possibility is bats' use of flight. Flight produces a fever-like response, resulting in elevated temperature (up to 38 °C (100 °F)) and metabolic rate. Additionally, this fever-like response may help them cope with actual fevers upon getting a viral infection.[7] Some research indicates that bats' immune systems have allowed them to cope with a variety of viruses. A 2018 study found that bats have a dampened STING response compared to other mammals, which could allow them to respond to viral threats without over-responding.[8] STING is a signaling molecule that helps coordinate various host defense genes against pathogens.[12] The authors of the study concluded that "the weakened, but not entirely lost, functionality of STING may have profound impact for bats to maintain the balanced state of 'effective response' but not 'over response' against viruses."[8]

Additionally, bats lack several inflammasomes found in other mammals;[8] other inflammasomes are present with a greatly reduced response.[13] While inflammation is an immune response to viruses, excessive inflammation is damaging to the body, and viruses like severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV) are known to kill humans by inducing excessive inflammation. Bats' immune systems may have evolved to be more tolerant of stressors such as viral infections compared to other mammals.[14]

Transmission to humans

 
Possible transmission routes of bat-borne pathogens to humans

The vast majority of bat viruses have no zoonotic potential, meaning they cannot be transmitted to humans.[6] The zoonotic viruses have four possible routes of transmission to humans: contact with bat body fluids (blood, saliva, urine, feces); intermediate hosts; environmental exposure; and blood-feeding arthropods.[15] Lyssaviruses like the rabies virus are transmitted from bats to humans via biting. Transmission of most other viruses does not appear to take place via biting, however. Contact with bat fluids such as guano, urine, and saliva is an important source of spillover from bats to humans. Other mammals may play a role in transmitting bat viruses to people, with pig farms a source of bat-borne viruses in Malaysia and Australia.[15][16] Other possible transmission routes of bat-borne viruses are more speculative. It is possible but unconfirmed that hunting, butchering, and consuming bat meat can result in viral spillover. While arthropods like mosquitoes, ticks, and fleas may transmit viral infections from other mammals to humans, it is highly speculative that arthropods play a role in mediating bat viruses to humans. There is little evidence of environmental transmission of viruses from bats to humans, meaning that bat-borne virus do not persist in the environment for long. However, a limited number of studies have been conducted on the subject.[15]

Bats compared to other viral reservoirs

Bats and their viruses may be the subject of more research than viruses found in other mammal orders, an example of research bias. A 2015 review found that from 1999 to 2013, there were 300–1200 papers published about bat viruses annually, compared to 12–45 publications for marsupial viruses and only 1–9 studies for sloth viruses. The same review found that bats do not have significantly greater viral diversity than other mammal groups. Bats, rodents, and primates all harbored significantly more zoonotic viruses than other mammal groups, though the differences among the aforementioned three groups were not significant (bats have no more zoonotic viruses than rodents and primates).[4] A 2020 review of mammals and birds found that the identity of the taxonomic groups did not have any impact on the probability of harboring zoonotic viruses. Instead, more diverse groups had greater viral diversity. Bat life history traits and immunity, while likely influential in determining bat viral communities, were not associated with a greater probability of viral spillover into humans.[5]

Sampling

 
A biologist holding a bat at an emerging infectious diseases training event in Panama

Bats are sampled for viruses in a variety of ways. They can be tested for seropositivity for a given virus using a method like ELISA, which determines whether or not they have the corresponding antibodies for the virus. They can also be surveyed using molecular detection techniques like PCR (polymerase chain reaction), which can be used to replicate and amplify viral sequences. Histopathology, which is the microscopic examination of tissue, can also be used. Viruses have been isolated from bat blood, saliva, feces, tissue, and urine. Some sampling is non-invasive and does not require killing the bat for sampling, whereas other sampling requires sacrificing the animal first. A 2016 review found no significant difference in total number of viruses found and new viruses discovered between lethal and non-lethal studies. Several species of threatened bat have been killed for viral sampling, including the Comoro rousette, Hildegarde's tomb bat, Natal free-tailed bat, and the long-fingered bat.[17]

Double-stranded DNA viruses

Adenoviruses

Adenoviruses have been detected in bat guano, urine, and oral and rectal swabs. They have been found in both megabats and microbats across a large geographic area. Bat adenoviruses are closely related to those finds in canids.[18] The greatest diversity of bat adenoviruses has been found in Eurasia, though the virus family may be undersampled in bats overall.[7]

Herpesviruses

Diverse herpesviruses have been found in bats in North and South America, Asia, Africa, and Europe,[18] including representatives of the three subfamilies, alpha-, beta-, and gammaherpesviruses.[7] Bat-hosted herpesviruses include the species Pteropodid alphaherpesvirus 1 and Vespertilionid gammaherpesvirus 1.[19]

Papillomaviruses

Papillomaviruses were first detected in bats in 2006, in the Egyptian fruit bat. They have since been identified in several other bat species, including the serotine bat, greater horseshoe bat, and the straw-colored fruit bat. Five distinct lineages of bat papillomaviruses have been recognized.[18]

Single-stranded DNA viruses

Anelloviruses

No anellovirus is known to cause disease in humans.[7] The first bat anellovirus, a Torque teno virus, was found in a Mexican free-tailed bat.[20] Novel anelloviruses have also been detected in two leaf-nosed bat species: the common vampire bat and Seba's short-tailed bat. The bat anelloviruses and one opossum anellovirus have been included in the proposed genus Sigmatorquevirus.[21]

Circoviruses

Circoviruses, family Circoviridae, are among the most diverse of all viruses.[22] Like anelloviruses, circoviruses are not associated with any disease in humans.[7] About a third of all circoviruses are associated with bats, found in North and South America, Europe, and Asia.[22] A study of horseshoe and vesper bats in China identified circoviruses from the genera Circovirus and Cyclovirus.[23]

Parvoviruses

Several kinds of parvoviruses are considered important for human and animal health. Several strains of parvovirus have been identified from bat guano in the US states of Texas and California. Serum analysis of the straw-colored fruit bat and Jamaican fruit bat led to the identification of two new parvoviruses. Bat parvoviruses are in the subfamily Parvovirinae, closely resembling the genera Protoparvovirus, Erythrovirus, and Bocaparvovirus.[18]

Double-stranded RNA viruses

Reoviruses

Nelson Bay orthoreoviruses, also known as Pteropine orthoreoviruses, identified from 1968 to 2014[24]
Virus name Year identified Host Location
Nelson Bay virus 1968 Bat Australia
Pulau virus 1999 Bat Malaysia
Melaka virus 2006 Human Malaysia
Kampar virus 2006 Human Malaysia
HK23629/07 2007 Human Hong Kong
Miyazaki-Bali/2007 2007 Human Indonesia/Japan
Sikamat virus 2010 Human Malaysia
Xi River virus 2010 Bat China
Indonesia/2010 2010 Bat Indonesia/Italy

Zoonotic

Some disease-causing reovirus species are associated with bats. One such virus is Melaka virus, which was linked to illness in a Malaysian man and his two children in 2006.[25][26] The man said that a bat had been in his home a week before he became ill, and the virus was closely related to other reoviruses linked to bats. Kampar virus was identified a few months later in another Malaysian man. Though he had no known contact with bats, Kampar virus is closely related to Melaka virus. Several other reovirus strains identified in ill humans are known as Miyazaki‐Bali/2007, Sikamat virus, and SI‐MRV01. No reoviruses linked to bats have caused death in humans.[25]

Other

Reoviruses include many viruses that do not cause disease in humans, including several found in bats. One reovirus species associated with bats is Nelson Bay orthoreovirus, sometimes called Pteropine orthoreovirus (PRV), which is an orthoreovirus; several virus strains of it have been identified in bats. The type member of Nelson Bay orthoreovirus is Nelson Bay virus (NBV), which was first identified in 1970 from the blood of a gray-headed flying fox in New South Wales, Australia. NBV was the first reovirus to be isolated from a bat species. Another strain of Nelson Bay orthoreovirus associated with bats is Pulau virus, which was first identified from the small flying fox of Tioman Island in 2006. Other viruses include Broome orthoreovirus from the little red flying fox of Broome, Western Australia; Xi River virus from Leschenault's rousette in Guangdong, China; and Cangyuan virus also from Leschenault's rousette.[25] Several mammalian orthoreoviruses are associated with bats, including at least three from Germany and 19 from Italy. These were found in pipistrelles, the brown long-eared bat, and the whiskered bat.[25]

Orbiviruses have been isolated from bats, including Ife virus from the straw-colored fruit bat, Japanaut virus from the common blossom bat, and Fomédé virus from Nycteris species.[25]

Positive-sense single-stranded RNA viruses

Astroviruses

Astroviruses have been found in several genera of bat in the Old World, including Miniopterus, Myotis, Hipposideros, Rhinolophus, Pipistrellus, Scotophilus, and Taphozous,[18] though none in Africa.[7] Bats have very high prevalence rates of astroviruses; studies in Hong Kong and mainland China found prevalence rates approaching 50% from anal swabs. No astroviruses identified in bats are associated with disease in humans.[18]

Caliciviruses

Bat caliciviruses were first identified in Hong Kong in the Pomona roundleaf bat,[18] and were later identified from tricolored bats in the US state of Maryland. Bat caliciviruses are similar to the genera Sapovirus and Valovirus, with noroviruses also detected from two microbat species in China.[27]

Coronaviruses

SARS-CoV, SARS-CoV-2, and MERS-CoV

 
Middle East respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus electron micrograph

Several zoonotic coronaviruses are associated with bats, including severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV) and Middle East respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus (MERS-CoV).[28] Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 is another zoonotic coronavirus likely originating in bats.[29][30] SARS-CoV causes the disease severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) in humans. The first documented case of SARS was in November 2002 in Foshan, China.[28] It became an epidemic, affecting 28 countries around the world with 8,096 cases and 774 deaths.[28] The natural reservoir of SARS-CoV was identified as bats, with the Chinese rufous horseshoe bat considered a particularly strong candidate after a coronavirus was recovered from a colony that had 95% nucleotide sequence similarity to SARS-CoV.[28] There is uncertainty on whether or not animals like Himalayan palm civets and raccoon dogs were intermediate hosts that facilitated the spread of the virus from bats to humans, or if humans acquired the virus directly from bats.[28][31]

The first human case of Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) was in June 2012 in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.[28] As of November 2019, 2,494 cases of MERS have been reported in twenty-seven countries, resulting in 858 fatalities.[32] It is believed that MERS-CoV originated in bats, though camels are likely the intermediate host through which humans became infected. Human-to-human transmission is possible, though does not easily occur.[33]

The SARS-CoV-2 outbreak in humans started in Wuhan, China in 2019.[34] Genetic analyses of SARS-COV-2 showed that it was highly similar to viruses found in horseshoe bats, with 96% similarity to a virus isolated from the intermediate horseshoe bat. Due to similarity with known bat coronaviruses, data "clearly indicates" that the natural reservoirs of SARS-COV-2 are bats. It is yet unclear how the virus was transmitted to humans, though an intermediate host may have been involved.[3] Phylogenetic reconstruction of SARS-CoV-2 suggests that the strain that caused a human pandemic diverged from the strain found in bats decades ago, likely between 1950 and 1980.[35]

Other

Bats harbor a great diversity of coronaviruses, with sampling by the EcoHealth Alliance in China alone identifying about 400 new strains of coronavirus.[36] A study of coronavirus diversity harbored by bats in eastern Thailand revealed forty-seven coronaviruses.[37]

Flaviviruses

 
The flavivirus West Nile virus

Most flaviviruses are transmitted via arthropods, but bats may play a role in the ecology of some species. Several strains of Dengue virus have been found in bats in the Americas, and West Nile virus has been identified in fruit bats in South India. Serological studies indicate that West Nile virus may also be present in bats in North America and the Yucatán Peninsula. Saint Louis encephalitis virus has been detected in bats in the US states of Texas and Ohio, as well as the Yucatán Peninsula. Japanese encephalitis virus or its associated antibodies have been found in several bat species throughout Asia. Other flaviviruses detected in bats include Sepik virus, Entebbe bat virus, Sokuluk virus, Yokose virus, Dakar bat virus, Bukalasa bat virus, Carey Island virus, Phnom Penh bat virus, Rio Bravo bat virus, Montana myotis leukoencephalitis virus, and Tamana bat virus.[18]

Picornaviruses

Several genera of picornaviruses have been found in bats, including Kobuvirus, Sapelovirus, Cardiovirus, and Senecavirus.[18] Picornaviruses have been identified from a diverse array of bat species around the world.[7]

Negative-sense single-stranded RNA viruses

Arenaviruses

Arenaviruses are mainly associated with rodents, though some can cause illness in humans. The first arenavirus identified in bats was Tacaribe mammarenavirus, which was isolated from Jamaican fruit bats and the great fruit-eating bat. Antibody response associated with Tacaribe virus has also been found in the common vampire bat, the little yellow-shouldered bat, and Heller's broad-nosed bat. It is unclear if bats are the natural reservoir of Tacaribe virus. There has been one known human infection by Tacaribe virus, though it was accidentally acquired in a laboratory setting.[18]

Hantaviruses

Hantaviruses, family Hantaviridae, naturally occur in vertebrates. All bat-associated hantaviruses are in the subfamily Mammantavirinae. Of the four genera within the subfamily, Loanvirus and Mobatvirus are the genera that have been documented in various bats. Almost all bat hantaviruses have been identified from microbats.[38] Mouyassue virus has been identified from the banana pipistrelle in Ivory Coast and the Cape serotine in Ethiopia;[38] Magboi virus from the hairy slit-faced bat in Sierra Leone; Xuan Son virus from the Pomona roundleaf bat in Vietnam; Huangpi virus from the Japanese house bat in China; Longquan loanvirus from several horseshoe bats in China;[18] Makokou virus from Noack's roundleaf bat in Gabon; Đakrông virus from Stoliczka's trident bat in Vietnam;[38] Brno loanvirus from the common noctule in the Czech Republic;[38] and Laibin mobatvirus from the black-bearded tomb bat in China.[39] As of 2019, only Quezon mobatvirus has been identified from a megabat, as it was identified from a Geoffroy's rousette in the Philippines.[38] Bat hantaviruses are not associated with illness in humans.[18][38]

Filoviruses

Marburgvirus and Ebolavirus

 
The Egyptian fruit bat, a known natural reservoir of Marburg virus and Ravn virus, which cause Marburg virus disease

Filoviridae is a family of virus containing two genera associated with bats: Marburgvirus and Ebolavirus, which contain the species that cause Marburg virus disease and Ebola virus disease, respectively. Though relatively few disease outbreaks are caused by filoviruses, they are of high concern due to their extreme virulence, or capacity to cause harm to their hosts. Filovirus outbreaks typically have high mortality rates in humans. Though the first filovirus was identified in 1967, it took more than twenty years to identify any natural reservoirs.[40]

Ebola virus disease is a relatively rare but life-threatening illness in humans, with an average mortality rate of 50% (though individual outbreaks may be as high as 90% mortality). The first outbreaks were in 1976 in South Sudan and Democratic Republic of the Congo.[41] The natural reservoirs of ebolaviruses are unknown.[42][43][44] However, some evidence indicates that megabats may be natural reservoirs.[40][41] Several megabat species have tested seropositive for antibodies against ebolaviruses, including the hammer-headed bat, Franquet's epauletted fruit bat, and little collared fruit bat.[40] Among others, it has been posited that the Western African Ebola virus epidemic began with a spillover event from an Angolan free-tailed bat to a human.[45] Other possible reservoirs include non-human primates,[42] rodents, shrews, carnivores, and ungulates.[46] Definitively stating that fruit bats are natural reservoirs is problematic; as of 2017, researchers have been largely unable to isolate ebolaviruses or their viral RNA sequences from fruit bats. Additionally, bats typically have low level of ebolavirus-associated antibodies, and seropositivity in bats is not strongly correlated to human outbreaks.[44]

Marburg virus disease (MVD) was first identified in 1967 during simultaneous outbreaks in Marburg and Frankfurt in Germany, and Belgrade, Serbia. MVD is highly virulent, with an average human mortality rate of 50%, but as high as 88% for individual outbreaks.[47] MVD is caused by Marburg virus and the closely related Ravn virus, which was formerly considered synonymous with Marburg virus.[48] Marburg virus was first detected in the Egyptian fruit bat in 2007,[40] which is now recognized as the natural reservoir of the virus.[47] Marburg virus has been detected in Egyptian fruit bats in Gabon, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Kenya, and Uganda.[40] Spillover from Egyptian fruit bats occurs when humans spend prolonged time in mines or caves inhabited by the bats,[47] though the exact mechanism of transmission is unclear.[40] Human-to-human transmission occurs through direct contact with infected bodily fluids, including blood or semen, or indirectly through contact with bedding or clothing exposed to these fluids.[47]

Other

Lloviu virus, a kind of filovirus in the genus Cuevavirus, has been identified from the common bent-wing bat in Spain.[40] Another filovirus, Bombali ebolavirus, has been isolated from free-tailed bats, including the little free-tailed bat and the Angolan free-tailed bat.[49] Neither Lloviu virus nor Bombali ebolavirus is associated with illness in humans.[50][49] Genomic RNA associated with Mengla dianlovirus, though not the virus itself, has been identified from Rousettus bats in China.[49]

Rhabdoviruses

Rabies-causing viruses

 
A common vampire bat (C) and wounds from its bites on a human scalp (A and B) and a cow leg (D)

Lyssaviruses (from the genus Lyssavirus in the family Rhabdoviridae) include the rabies virus, Australian bat lyssavirus, and other related viruses, many of which are also harbored by bats. Unlike most other viruses in the family Rhabdoviridae, which are transmitted by arthropods, lyssaviruses are transmitted by mammals, most frequently through biting. All mammals are susceptible to lyssaviruses, though bats and carnivores are the most common natural reservoirs. The vast majority of human rabies cases are a result of the rabies virus, with only twelve other human cases attributed to other lyssaviruses as of 2015.[51] These rarer lyssaviruses associated with bats include Duvenhage lyssavirus (three human cases as of 2015); European bat 1 lyssavirus (one human case as of 2015); European bat 2 lyssavirus (two human cases as of 2015); and Irkut lyssavirus (one human case as of 2015). Microbats are suspected as the reservoirs of these four uncommon lyssaviruses.[51][52]

After transmission has occurred, the average human is asymptomatic for two months, though the incubation period can be as short as a week or as long as several years.[51] Italian scientist Antonio Carini was the first to hypothesize that rabies virus could be transmitted by bats, which he did in 1911. This same conclusion was reached by Hélder Queiroz in 1934 and Joseph Lennox Pawan in 1936. Vampire bats were the first to be documented with rabies; in 1953, an insectivorous bat in Florida was discovered with rabies, making it the first documented occurrence in an insectivorous species outside the vampire bats' ranges.[53] Bats have an overall low prevalence of rabies virus, with a majority of surveys of apparently healthy individuals showing rabies incidence of 0.0–0.5%.[51] Sick bats are more likely to be submitted for rabies testing than apparently healthy bats, known as sampling bias,[54] with most studies reporting rabies incidence of 5–20% in sick or dead bats.[51] Rabies virus exposure can be fatal in bats, though it is likely that the majority of individuals do not develop the disease after exposure.[51] In non-bat mammals, exposure to the rabies virus almost always leads to death.[52]

 
An injury from the bite of a big brown bat

Globally, dogs are by far the most common source of human rabies deaths.[55] Bats are the most common source of rabies in humans in North and South America, Western Europe, and Australia.[56] Many feeding guilds of bats may transmit rabies to humans, including insectivorous, frugivorous, nectarivorous, omnivorous, sanguivorous, and carnivorous species.[56] The common vampire bat is a source of human rabies in Central and South America, though the frequency at which humans are bitten is poorly understood.[57] Between 1993 and 2002, the majority of human rabies cases associated with bats in the Americas were the result of non-vampire bats.[52] In North America, about half of human rabies instances are cryptic, meaning that the patient has no known bite history.[51] While it has been speculated that rabies virus could be transmitted through aerosols, studies of the rabies virus have concluded that this is only feasible in limited conditions. These conditions include a very large colony of bats in a hot and humid cave with poor ventilation. While two human deaths in 1956 and 1959 had been tentatively attributed to aerosolization of the rabies virus after entering a cave with bats, "investigations of the 2 reported human cases revealed that both infections could be explained by means other than aerosol transmission".[58] It is instead generally thought that most instances of cryptic rabies are the result of an unknown bat bite.[51] Bites from a bat can be so small that they are not visible without magnification equipment, for example. Outside of bites, rabies virus exposure can also occur if infected fluids come in contact with a mucous membrane or a break in the skin.[58]

Other

Many bat lyssaviruses are not associated with infection in humans. These include Lagos bat lyssavirus, Shimoni bat lyssavirus, Khujand lyssavirus, Aravan lyssavirus, Bokeloh bat lyssavirus, West Caucasian bat lyssavirus, and Lleida bat lyssavirus.[52][51] Lagos bat lyssavirus, also known as Lagos bat virus (LBV), has been isolated from a megabat in sub-Saharan Africa.[51] This lyssavirus has four distinct lineages, all of which are found in the straw-colored fruit bat.[59]

Rhabdoviruses from other genera have been identified in bats. This includes several from the genus Ledantevirus: Kern Canyon virus, which was found in the Yuma myotis in California (US); Kolente virus from the Jones's roundleaf bat in Guinea;[60] Mount Elgon bat virus from the eloquent horseshoe bat in Kenya; Oita virus from the little Japanese horseshoe bat; and Fikirini virus from the striped leaf-nosed bat in Kenya.[61]

Orthomyxoviruses

 
The circulation of influenza A viruses. Influenza A viruses in bats possibly originated in birds.

Orthomyxoviruses include influenza viruses. While birds are the primary reservoir for the genus Alphainfluenzavirus, a few bat species in Central and South America have also tested positive for the viruses. These species include the little yellow-shouldered bat and the flat-faced fruit-eating bat. Bat populations tested in Guatemala and Peru had high seropositivity rates, which suggests that influenza A infections are common among bats in the New World.[18]

Paramyxoviruses

Hendra, Nipah, and Menangle viruses

 
Date palm sap collection, a primary exposure route for Nipah virus

Paramyxoviridae is a family that includes several zoonotic viruses naturally found in bats. Two are in the genus HenipavirusHendra virus and Nipah virus. Hendra virus was first identified in 1994 in Hendra, Australia. Four different species of flying fox have tested positive for Hendra virus: the gray-headed flying fox, little red flying fox, spectacled flying fox, and black flying fox.[62] Horses are the intermediate host between flying foxes and humans. Between 1994 and 2014, there were fifty-five outbreaks of Hendra virus in Australia, resulting in the death or euthanization of eighty-eight horses. Seven humans are known to have been infected by Hendra virus, with four fatalities.[16] Six of the seven infected humans were directly exposed to the blood or other fluids of sick or dead horses (three were veterinarians), while the seventh case was a veterinary nurse who had recently irrigated the nasal cavity of a horse not yet exhibiting symptoms. It is unclear how horses become infected with Hendra virus, though it is believed to occur following direct exposure to flying fox fluids. There is also evidence of horse-to-horse transmission. In late 2012, a vaccine was released to prevent infection in horses.[62] Vaccine uptake has been low, with an estimated 11–17% of Australian horses vaccinated by 2017.[63]

The first human outbreak of Nipah virus was in 1998 in Malaysia.[16] It was determined that flying foxes were also the reservoir of the virus, with domestic pigs as the intermediate host between bats and humans. Outbreaks have also occurred in Bangladesh, India, Singapore, and the Philippines. In Bangladesh, the primary mode of transmission of Nipah virus to humans is through the consumption of date palm sap. Pots set out to collect the sap are contaminated with flying fox urine and guano, and the bats also lick the sap streams flowing into the pots. It has been speculated that the virus may also be transmitted to humans by eating fruit partially consumed by flying foxes, or by coming into contact with their urine, though no definitive evidence supports this.[64]

An additional zoonotic paramyxovirus that bats harbor is Menangle virus, which was first identified at a hog farm in New South Wales, Australia. Flying foxes were once again identified as the natural reservoirs of the virus, with the black, spectacled, and gray-headed seropositive for the virus. Two employees of the hog farm became sick with flu-like illnesses, later shown to be a result of the virus.[16] Sosuga pararubulavirus is known to have infected one person—an American wildlife biologist who had conducted bat and rodent research in Uganda.[16] The Egyptian fruit bat later tested positive for the virus, indicating that it is potentially a natural reservoir.[65]

Other

Bats host several paramyxoviruses that are not known to affect humans. Bats are the reservoir of Cedar virus, a paramyxovirus first discovered in flying foxes South East Queensland.[16] The zoonotic potential of Cedar virus is unknown.[66] In Brazil in 1979, Mapuera orthorubulavirus was isolated from the saliva of the little yellow-shouldered bat. Mapuera virus has never been associated with disease in other animals or humans, but experimental exposure of mice to the virus resulted in fatality.[16] Tioman pararubulavirus has been isolated from the urine of the small flying fox, which causes fever in some domestic pigs after exposure, but no other symptoms. Tukoko virus has been detected from Leschenault's rousette in China.[16] Bats have been suggested as the host of Porcine orthorubulavirus, though definitive evidence has not been collected.[16]

Togaviruses

Togaviruses include alphaviruses, which have been detected in bats. Alphaviruses cause encephalitis in humans. Alphaviruses that have been detected in bats include Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus, Eastern equine encephalitis virus, and Western equine encephalitis virus. Sindbis virus has been detected from horseshoe bats and roundleaf bats. Chikungunya virus has been isolated from Leschenault's rousette, the Egyptian fruit bat, Sundevall's roundleaf bat, the little free-tailed bat, and Scotophilus species.[18]

Positive-sense single-stranded RNA viruses that replicate through a DNA intermediate

Retroviruses

Bats can be infected with retroviruses, including the gammaretrovirus found in horseshoe bats, Leschenault's rousette, and the greater false vampire bat. Several bat retroviruses have been identified that are similar to the Reticuloendotheliosis virus found in birds. These retroviruses were found in mouse-eared bats, horseshoe bats, and flying foxes. The discovery of varied and distinct gammaretroviruses in bat genomes indicates that bats likely played important roles in their diversification. Bats also host an extensive number of betaretroviruses, including within mouse-eared bats, horseshoe bats, and flying foxes. Bat betaretroviruses span the entire breadth of betaretrovirus diversity, similar to those of rodents, which may indicate that bats and rodents are primary reservoirs of the viruses. Betaretroviruses have infected bats for a majority of bat evolutionary history, since at least 36 million years ago.[67]

Double-stranded DNA viruses that replicate through a single-stranded RNA intermediate

 
Hepadnaviruses have been identified in the tent-making bat, which is native to Central and South America

Hepadnaviruses

Hepadnaviruses are also known to affect bats, with the tent-making bat, Noack's roundleaf bat, and the halcyon horseshoe bat known to harbor several. The hepadnavirus found in the tent-making bat, which is a New World species, was the closest relative of human hepadnaviruses.[67] Though relatively few hepadnaviruses have been identified in bats, it is highly likely that additional strains will be discovered through further research. As of 2016, they had been found in four bat families: Hipposideridae and Rhinolophidae from the suborder Yinpterochiroptera and Molossidae and Vespertilionidae from Yangochiroptera. The high diversity of bat hosts suggests that bats share a long evolutionary history with hepadnaviruses, indicating bats may have had an important role in hepadnavirus evolution.[68]

See also

References

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virome, virome, group, viruses, associated, with, bats, bats, host, diverse, array, viruses, including, seven, types, described, baltimore, classification, system, double, stranded, viruses, single, stranded, viruses, double, stranded, viruses, positive, sense. The bat virome is the group of viruses associated with bats Bats host a diverse array of viruses including all seven types described by the Baltimore classification system I double stranded DNA viruses II single stranded DNA viruses III double stranded RNA viruses IV positive sense single stranded RNA viruses V negative sense single stranded RNA viruses VI positive sense single stranded RNA viruses that replicate through a DNA intermediate and VII double stranded DNA viruses that replicate through a single stranded RNA intermediate The greatest share of bat associated viruses identified as of 2020 are of type IV in the family Coronaviridae A scientist swabs the muzzle of a tricolored bat in a cave in TennesseeBats harbor several viruses that are zoonotic or capable of infecting humans and some bat borne viruses are considered important emerging viruses 1 2 These zoonotic viruses include the rabies virus SARS CoV MERS CoV Marburg virus Nipah virus and Hendra virus While research clearly indicates that SARS CoV 2 originated in bats 3 it is unknown how it was transmitted to humans or if an intermediate host was involved It has been speculated that bats may have a role in the ecology of the Ebola virus though this is unconfirmed While transmission of rabies from bats to humans usually occurs via biting most other zoonotic bat viruses are transmitted by direct contact with infected bat fluids like urine guano or saliva or through contact with an infected non bat intermediate host There is no firm evidence that butchering or consuming bat meat can lead to viral transmission though this has been speculated Despite the abundance of viruses associated with bats they rarely become ill from viral infections and rabies is the only viral illness known to kill bats Much research has been conducted on bat virology particularly bat immune response Bats immune systems differ from other mammals in their lack of several inflammasomes which activate the body s inflammatory response as well as a dampened stimulator of interferon genes STING response which helps control host response to pathogens Preliminary evidence indicates bats are thus more tolerant of infection than other mammals While much research has centered on bats as a source of zoonotic disease reviews have found mixed results on whether bats harbor more zoonotic viruses than other groups A 2015 review found that bats do not harbor more zoonotic viruses than primates or rodents though the three groups harbored more than other mammal orders 4 In contrast a 2020 review found that bats do not have more zoonotic viruses than any other bird or mammal group when viral diversity is measured relative to host diversity as bats are the second most diverse order of mammals 5 Contents 1 Viral diversity 1 1 Transmission to humans 1 2 Bats compared to other viral reservoirs 1 3 Sampling 2 Double stranded DNA viruses 2 1 Adenoviruses 2 2 Herpesviruses 2 3 Papillomaviruses 3 Single stranded DNA viruses 3 1 Anelloviruses 3 2 Circoviruses 3 3 Parvoviruses 4 Double stranded RNA viruses 4 1 Reoviruses 4 1 1 Zoonotic 4 1 2 Other 5 Positive sense single stranded RNA viruses 5 1 Astroviruses 5 2 Caliciviruses 5 3 Coronaviruses 5 3 1 SARS CoV SARS CoV 2 and MERS CoV 5 3 2 Other 5 4 Flaviviruses 5 5 Picornaviruses 6 Negative sense single stranded RNA viruses 6 1 Arenaviruses 6 2 Hantaviruses 6 3 Filoviruses 6 3 1 Marburgvirus and Ebolavirus 6 3 2 Other 6 4 Rhabdoviruses 6 4 1 Rabies causing viruses 6 4 2 Other 6 5 Orthomyxoviruses 6 6 Paramyxoviruses 6 6 1 Hendra Nipah and Menangle viruses 6 6 2 Other 6 7 Togaviruses 7 Positive sense single stranded RNA viruses that replicate through a DNA intermediate 7 1 Retroviruses 8 Double stranded DNA viruses that replicate through a single stranded RNA intermediate 8 1 Hepadnaviruses 9 See also 10 ReferencesViral diversity EditNumber of viral sequences detected in bats by virus family as of 2020 6 Virus family No sequences n 10 845 Coronaviridae 3 796 35 0 Rhabdoviridae 2 890 26 6 Paramyxoviridae 1 025 9 5 Astroviridae 724 6 7 Adenoviridae 365 3 4 Polyomaviridae 302 2 8 Reoviridae 288 2 7 Circoviridae 250 2 3 Herpesviridae 233 2 1 Flaviviridae 218 2 0 Picornaviridae 181 1 7 Parvoviridae 165 1 5 Filoviridae 123 1 1 Hepadnaviridae 78 lt 1 0 Papillomaviridae 59 lt 1 0 Hantaviridae 59 lt 1 0 Caliciviridae 43 lt 1 0 Peribunyaviridae 31 lt 1 0 Nairoviridae 22 lt 1 0 Retroviridae 18 lt 1 0 Orthomyxoviridae 8 lt 1 0 Phenuiviridae 8 lt 1 0 Poxviridae 6 lt 1 0 Picobirnaviridae 4 lt 1 0 Togaviridae 3 lt 1 0 Genomoviridae 2 lt 1 0 Bornaviridae 2 lt 1 0 Anelloviridae 1 lt 1 0 Viruses have been found in bat populations around the world Bats harbor all groups of viruses in the Baltimore classification 7 representing at least 28 families of viruses 6 Most of the viruses harbored by bats are RNA viruses though they are also known to have DNA viruses 8 Bats are more tolerant of viruses than terrestrial mammals 8 A single bat can host several different kinds of viruses without becoming ill 9 Bats have also been shown to be more susceptible to reinfection with the same viruses whereas other mammals especially humans have a greater propensity for developing varying degrees of immunity 10 11 Their behavior and life history also make them exquisitely suitable hosts of viruses and other disease agents with long lifespans the ability to enter torpor or hibernate and their ability to traverse landscapes with daily and seasonal movement 1 Though bats harbor diverse viruses they are rarely lethal to the bat host Only the rabies virus and a few other lyssaviruses have been confirmed to kill bats 7 Various factors have been implicated in bats ability to survive viral infections One possibility is bats use of flight Flight produces a fever like response resulting in elevated temperature up to 38 C 100 F and metabolic rate Additionally this fever like response may help them cope with actual fevers upon getting a viral infection 7 Some research indicates that bats immune systems have allowed them to cope with a variety of viruses A 2018 study found that bats have a dampened STING response compared to other mammals which could allow them to respond to viral threats without over responding 8 STING is a signaling molecule that helps coordinate various host defense genes against pathogens 12 The authors of the study concluded that the weakened but not entirely lost functionality of STING may have profound impact for bats to maintain the balanced state of effective response but not over response against viruses 8 Additionally bats lack several inflammasomes found in other mammals 8 other inflammasomes are present with a greatly reduced response 13 While inflammation is an immune response to viruses excessive inflammation is damaging to the body and viruses like severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus SARS CoV are known to kill humans by inducing excessive inflammation Bats immune systems may have evolved to be more tolerant of stressors such as viral infections compared to other mammals 14 Transmission to humans Edit Possible transmission routes of bat borne pathogens to humansThe vast majority of bat viruses have no zoonotic potential meaning they cannot be transmitted to humans 6 The zoonotic viruses have four possible routes of transmission to humans contact with bat body fluids blood saliva urine feces intermediate hosts environmental exposure and blood feeding arthropods 15 Lyssaviruses like the rabies virus are transmitted from bats to humans via biting Transmission of most other viruses does not appear to take place via biting however Contact with bat fluids such as guano urine and saliva is an important source of spillover from bats to humans Other mammals may play a role in transmitting bat viruses to people with pig farms a source of bat borne viruses in Malaysia and Australia 15 16 Other possible transmission routes of bat borne viruses are more speculative It is possible but unconfirmed that hunting butchering and consuming bat meat can result in viral spillover While arthropods like mosquitoes ticks and fleas may transmit viral infections from other mammals to humans it is highly speculative that arthropods play a role in mediating bat viruses to humans There is little evidence of environmental transmission of viruses from bats to humans meaning that bat borne virus do not persist in the environment for long However a limited number of studies have been conducted on the subject 15 Bats compared to other viral reservoirs Edit Bats and their viruses may be the subject of more research than viruses found in other mammal orders an example of research bias A 2015 review found that from 1999 to 2013 there were 300 1200 papers published about bat viruses annually compared to 12 45 publications for marsupial viruses and only 1 9 studies for sloth viruses The same review found that bats do not have significantly greater viral diversity than other mammal groups Bats rodents and primates all harbored significantly more zoonotic viruses than other mammal groups though the differences among the aforementioned three groups were not significant bats have no more zoonotic viruses than rodents and primates 4 A 2020 review of mammals and birds found that the identity of the taxonomic groups did not have any impact on the probability of harboring zoonotic viruses Instead more diverse groups had greater viral diversity Bat life history traits and immunity while likely influential in determining bat viral communities were not associated with a greater probability of viral spillover into humans 5 Sampling Edit A biologist holding a bat at an emerging infectious diseases training event in PanamaBats are sampled for viruses in a variety of ways They can be tested for seropositivity for a given virus using a method like ELISA which determines whether or not they have the corresponding antibodies for the virus They can also be surveyed using molecular detection techniques like PCR polymerase chain reaction which can be used to replicate and amplify viral sequences Histopathology which is the microscopic examination of tissue can also be used Viruses have been isolated from bat blood saliva feces tissue and urine Some sampling is non invasive and does not require killing the bat for sampling whereas other sampling requires sacrificing the animal first A 2016 review found no significant difference in total number of viruses found and new viruses discovered between lethal and non lethal studies Several species of threatened bat have been killed for viral sampling including the Comoro rousette Hildegarde s tomb bat Natal free tailed bat and the long fingered bat 17 Double stranded DNA viruses EditMain article dsDNA virus Adenoviruses Edit Adenoviruses have been detected in bat guano urine and oral and rectal swabs They have been found in both megabats and microbats across a large geographic area Bat adenoviruses are closely related to those finds in canids 18 The greatest diversity of bat adenoviruses has been found in Eurasia though the virus family may be undersampled in bats overall 7 Herpesviruses Edit Diverse herpesviruses have been found in bats in North and South America Asia Africa and Europe 18 including representatives of the three subfamilies alpha beta and gammaherpesviruses 7 Bat hosted herpesviruses include the species Pteropodid alphaherpesvirus 1 and Vespertilionid gammaherpesvirus 1 19 Papillomaviruses Edit Papillomaviruses were first detected in bats in 2006 in the Egyptian fruit bat They have since been identified in several other bat species including the serotine bat greater horseshoe bat and the straw colored fruit bat Five distinct lineages of bat papillomaviruses have been recognized 18 Single stranded DNA viruses EditMain article ssDNA virus Anelloviruses Edit No anellovirus is known to cause disease in humans 7 The first bat anellovirus a Torque teno virus was found in a Mexican free tailed bat 20 Novel anelloviruses have also been detected in two leaf nosed bat species the common vampire bat and Seba s short tailed bat The bat anelloviruses and one opossum anellovirus have been included in the proposed genus Sigmatorquevirus 21 Circoviruses Edit Circoviruses family Circoviridae are among the most diverse of all viruses 22 Like anelloviruses circoviruses are not associated with any disease in humans 7 About a third of all circoviruses are associated with bats found in North and South America Europe and Asia 22 A study of horseshoe and vesper bats in China identified circoviruses from the genera Circovirus and Cyclovirus 23 Parvoviruses Edit Several kinds of parvoviruses are considered important for human and animal health Several strains of parvovirus have been identified from bat guano in the US states of Texas and California Serum analysis of the straw colored fruit bat and Jamaican fruit bat led to the identification of two new parvoviruses Bat parvoviruses are in the subfamily Parvovirinae closely resembling the genera Protoparvovirus Erythrovirus and Bocaparvovirus 18 Double stranded RNA viruses EditMain article dsRNA virus Reoviruses Edit Nelson Bay orthoreoviruses also known as Pteropine orthoreoviruses identified from 1968 to 2014 24 Virus name Year identified Host LocationNelson Bay virus 1968 Bat AustraliaPulau virus 1999 Bat MalaysiaMelaka virus 2006 Human MalaysiaKampar virus 2006 Human MalaysiaHK23629 07 2007 Human Hong KongMiyazaki Bali 2007 2007 Human Indonesia JapanSikamat virus 2010 Human MalaysiaXi River virus 2010 Bat ChinaIndonesia 2010 2010 Bat Indonesia ItalyZoonotic Edit Some disease causing reovirus species are associated with bats One such virus is Melaka virus which was linked to illness in a Malaysian man and his two children in 2006 25 26 The man said that a bat had been in his home a week before he became ill and the virus was closely related to other reoviruses linked to bats Kampar virus was identified a few months later in another Malaysian man Though he had no known contact with bats Kampar virus is closely related to Melaka virus Several other reovirus strains identified in ill humans are known as Miyazaki Bali 2007 Sikamat virus and SI MRV01 No reoviruses linked to bats have caused death in humans 25 Other Edit Reoviruses include many viruses that do not cause disease in humans including several found in bats One reovirus species associated with bats is Nelson Bay orthoreovirus sometimes called Pteropine orthoreovirus PRV which is an orthoreovirus several virus strains of it have been identified in bats The type member of Nelson Bay orthoreovirus is Nelson Bay virus NBV which was first identified in 1970 from the blood of a gray headed flying fox in New South Wales Australia NBV was the first reovirus to be isolated from a bat species Another strain of Nelson Bay orthoreovirus associated with bats is Pulau virus which was first identified from the small flying fox of Tioman Island in 2006 Other viruses include Broome orthoreovirus from the little red flying fox of Broome Western Australia Xi River virus from Leschenault s rousette in Guangdong China and Cangyuan virus also from Leschenault s rousette 25 Several mammalian orthoreoviruses are associated with bats including at least three from Germany and 19 from Italy These were found in pipistrelles the brown long eared bat and the whiskered bat 25 Orbiviruses have been isolated from bats including Ife virus from the straw colored fruit bat Japanaut virus from the common blossom bat and Fomede virus from Nycteris species 25 Positive sense single stranded RNA viruses EditMain article positive sense ssRNA virus Astroviruses Edit Astroviruses have been found in several genera of bat in the Old World including Miniopterus Myotis Hipposideros Rhinolophus Pipistrellus Scotophilus and Taphozous 18 though none in Africa 7 Bats have very high prevalence rates of astroviruses studies in Hong Kong and mainland China found prevalence rates approaching 50 from anal swabs No astroviruses identified in bats are associated with disease in humans 18 Caliciviruses Edit Bat caliciviruses were first identified in Hong Kong in the Pomona roundleaf bat 18 and were later identified from tricolored bats in the US state of Maryland Bat caliciviruses are similar to the genera Sapovirus and Valovirus with noroviruses also detected from two microbat species in China 27 Coronaviruses Edit SARS CoV SARS CoV 2 and MERS CoV Edit Middle East respiratory syndrome related coronavirus electron micrographSeveral zoonotic coronaviruses are associated with bats including severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus SARS CoV and Middle East respiratory syndrome related coronavirus MERS CoV 28 Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 is another zoonotic coronavirus likely originating in bats 29 30 SARS CoV causes the disease severe acute respiratory syndrome SARS in humans The first documented case of SARS was in November 2002 in Foshan China 28 It became an epidemic affecting 28 countries around the world with 8 096 cases and 774 deaths 28 The natural reservoir of SARS CoV was identified as bats with the Chinese rufous horseshoe bat considered a particularly strong candidate after a coronavirus was recovered from a colony that had 95 nucleotide sequence similarity to SARS CoV 28 There is uncertainty on whether or not animals like Himalayan palm civets and raccoon dogs were intermediate hosts that facilitated the spread of the virus from bats to humans or if humans acquired the virus directly from bats 28 31 The first human case of Middle East respiratory syndrome MERS was in June 2012 in Jeddah Saudi Arabia 28 As of November 2019 2 494 cases of MERS have been reported in twenty seven countries resulting in 858 fatalities 32 It is believed that MERS CoV originated in bats though camels are likely the intermediate host through which humans became infected Human to human transmission is possible though does not easily occur 33 The SARS CoV 2 outbreak in humans started in Wuhan China in 2019 34 Genetic analyses of SARS COV 2 showed that it was highly similar to viruses found in horseshoe bats with 96 similarity to a virus isolated from the intermediate horseshoe bat Due to similarity with known bat coronaviruses data clearly indicates that the natural reservoirs of SARS COV 2 are bats It is yet unclear how the virus was transmitted to humans though an intermediate host may have been involved 3 Phylogenetic reconstruction of SARS CoV 2 suggests that the strain that caused a human pandemic diverged from the strain found in bats decades ago likely between 1950 and 1980 35 Other Edit Bats harbor a great diversity of coronaviruses with sampling by the EcoHealth Alliance in China alone identifying about 400 new strains of coronavirus 36 A study of coronavirus diversity harbored by bats in eastern Thailand revealed forty seven coronaviruses 37 Flaviviruses Edit The flavivirus West Nile virusMost flaviviruses are transmitted via arthropods but bats may play a role in the ecology of some species Several strains of Dengue virus have been found in bats in the Americas and West Nile virus has been identified in fruit bats in South India Serological studies indicate that West Nile virus may also be present in bats in North America and the Yucatan Peninsula Saint Louis encephalitis virus has been detected in bats in the US states of Texas and Ohio as well as the Yucatan Peninsula Japanese encephalitis virus or its associated antibodies have been found in several bat species throughout Asia Other flaviviruses detected in bats include Sepik virus Entebbe bat virus Sokuluk virus Yokose virus Dakar bat virus Bukalasa bat virus Carey Island virus Phnom Penh bat virus Rio Bravo bat virus Montana myotis leukoencephalitis virus and Tamana bat virus 18 Picornaviruses Edit Several genera of picornaviruses have been found in bats including Kobuvirus Sapelovirus Cardiovirus and Senecavirus 18 Picornaviruses have been identified from a diverse array of bat species around the world 7 Negative sense single stranded RNA viruses EditMain article negative sense ssRNA virus Arenaviruses Edit Arenaviruses are mainly associated with rodents though some can cause illness in humans The first arenavirus identified in bats was Tacaribe mammarenavirus which was isolated from Jamaican fruit bats and the great fruit eating bat Antibody response associated with Tacaribe virus has also been found in the common vampire bat the little yellow shouldered bat and Heller s broad nosed bat It is unclear if bats are the natural reservoir of Tacaribe virus There has been one known human infection by Tacaribe virus though it was accidentally acquired in a laboratory setting 18 Hantaviruses Edit Hantaviruses family Hantaviridae naturally occur in vertebrates All bat associated hantaviruses are in the subfamily Mammantavirinae Of the four genera within the subfamily Loanvirus and Mobatvirus are the genera that have been documented in various bats Almost all bat hantaviruses have been identified from microbats 38 Mouyassue virus has been identified from the banana pipistrelle in Ivory Coast and the Cape serotine in Ethiopia 38 Magboi virus from the hairy slit faced bat in Sierra Leone Xuan Son virus from the Pomona roundleaf bat in Vietnam Huangpi virus from the Japanese house bat in China Longquan loanvirus from several horseshoe bats in China 18 Makokou virus from Noack s roundleaf bat in Gabon Đakrong virus from Stoliczka s trident bat in Vietnam 38 Brno loanvirus from the common noctule in the Czech Republic 38 and Laibin mobatvirus from the black bearded tomb bat in China 39 As of 2019 only Quezon mobatvirus has been identified from a megabat as it was identified from a Geoffroy s rousette in the Philippines 38 Bat hantaviruses are not associated with illness in humans 18 38 Filoviruses Edit Marburgvirus and Ebolavirus Edit The Egyptian fruit bat a known natural reservoir of Marburg virus and Ravn virus which cause Marburg virus diseaseFiloviridae is a family of virus containing two genera associated with bats Marburgvirus and Ebolavirus which contain the species that cause Marburg virus disease and Ebola virus disease respectively Though relatively few disease outbreaks are caused by filoviruses they are of high concern due to their extreme virulence or capacity to cause harm to their hosts Filovirus outbreaks typically have high mortality rates in humans Though the first filovirus was identified in 1967 it took more than twenty years to identify any natural reservoirs 40 Ebola virus disease is a relatively rare but life threatening illness in humans with an average mortality rate of 50 though individual outbreaks may be as high as 90 mortality The first outbreaks were in 1976 in South Sudan and Democratic Republic of the Congo 41 The natural reservoirs of ebolaviruses are unknown 42 43 44 However some evidence indicates that megabats may be natural reservoirs 40 41 Several megabat species have tested seropositive for antibodies against ebolaviruses including the hammer headed bat Franquet s epauletted fruit bat and little collared fruit bat 40 Among others it has been posited that the Western African Ebola virus epidemic began with a spillover event from an Angolan free tailed bat to a human 45 Other possible reservoirs include non human primates 42 rodents shrews carnivores and ungulates 46 Definitively stating that fruit bats are natural reservoirs is problematic as of 2017 researchers have been largely unable to isolate ebolaviruses or their viral RNA sequences from fruit bats Additionally bats typically have low level of ebolavirus associated antibodies and seropositivity in bats is not strongly correlated to human outbreaks 44 Marburg virus disease MVD was first identified in 1967 during simultaneous outbreaks in Marburg and Frankfurt in Germany and Belgrade Serbia MVD is highly virulent with an average human mortality rate of 50 but as high as 88 for individual outbreaks 47 MVD is caused by Marburg virus and the closely related Ravn virus which was formerly considered synonymous with Marburg virus 48 Marburg virus was first detected in the Egyptian fruit bat in 2007 40 which is now recognized as the natural reservoir of the virus 47 Marburg virus has been detected in Egyptian fruit bats in Gabon Democratic Republic of the Congo Kenya and Uganda 40 Spillover from Egyptian fruit bats occurs when humans spend prolonged time in mines or caves inhabited by the bats 47 though the exact mechanism of transmission is unclear 40 Human to human transmission occurs through direct contact with infected bodily fluids including blood or semen or indirectly through contact with bedding or clothing exposed to these fluids 47 Other Edit Lloviu virus a kind of filovirus in the genus Cuevavirus has been identified from the common bent wing bat in Spain 40 Another filovirus Bombali ebolavirus has been isolated from free tailed bats including the little free tailed bat and the Angolan free tailed bat 49 Neither Lloviu virus nor Bombali ebolavirus is associated with illness in humans 50 49 Genomic RNA associated with Mengla dianlovirus though not the virus itself has been identified from Rousettus bats in China 49 Rhabdoviruses Edit Rabies causing viruses Edit A common vampire bat C and wounds from its bites on a human scalp A and B and a cow leg D Lyssaviruses from the genus Lyssavirus in the family Rhabdoviridae include the rabies virus Australian bat lyssavirus and other related viruses many of which are also harbored by bats Unlike most other viruses in the family Rhabdoviridae which are transmitted by arthropods lyssaviruses are transmitted by mammals most frequently through biting All mammals are susceptible to lyssaviruses though bats and carnivores are the most common natural reservoirs The vast majority of human rabies cases are a result of the rabies virus with only twelve other human cases attributed to other lyssaviruses as of 2015 51 These rarer lyssaviruses associated with bats include Duvenhage lyssavirus three human cases as of 2015 European bat 1 lyssavirus one human case as of 2015 European bat 2 lyssavirus two human cases as of 2015 and Irkut lyssavirus one human case as of 2015 Microbats are suspected as the reservoirs of these four uncommon lyssaviruses 51 52 After transmission has occurred the average human is asymptomatic for two months though the incubation period can be as short as a week or as long as several years 51 Italian scientist Antonio Carini was the first to hypothesize that rabies virus could be transmitted by bats which he did in 1911 This same conclusion was reached by Helder Queiroz in 1934 and Joseph Lennox Pawan in 1936 Vampire bats were the first to be documented with rabies in 1953 an insectivorous bat in Florida was discovered with rabies making it the first documented occurrence in an insectivorous species outside the vampire bats ranges 53 Bats have an overall low prevalence of rabies virus with a majority of surveys of apparently healthy individuals showing rabies incidence of 0 0 0 5 51 Sick bats are more likely to be submitted for rabies testing than apparently healthy bats known as sampling bias 54 with most studies reporting rabies incidence of 5 20 in sick or dead bats 51 Rabies virus exposure can be fatal in bats though it is likely that the majority of individuals do not develop the disease after exposure 51 In non bat mammals exposure to the rabies virus almost always leads to death 52 An injury from the bite of a big brown batGlobally dogs are by far the most common source of human rabies deaths 55 Bats are the most common source of rabies in humans in North and South America Western Europe and Australia 56 Many feeding guilds of bats may transmit rabies to humans including insectivorous frugivorous nectarivorous omnivorous sanguivorous and carnivorous species 56 The common vampire bat is a source of human rabies in Central and South America though the frequency at which humans are bitten is poorly understood 57 Between 1993 and 2002 the majority of human rabies cases associated with bats in the Americas were the result of non vampire bats 52 In North America about half of human rabies instances are cryptic meaning that the patient has no known bite history 51 While it has been speculated that rabies virus could be transmitted through aerosols studies of the rabies virus have concluded that this is only feasible in limited conditions These conditions include a very large colony of bats in a hot and humid cave with poor ventilation While two human deaths in 1956 and 1959 had been tentatively attributed to aerosolization of the rabies virus after entering a cave with bats investigations of the 2 reported human cases revealed that both infections could be explained by means other than aerosol transmission 58 It is instead generally thought that most instances of cryptic rabies are the result of an unknown bat bite 51 Bites from a bat can be so small that they are not visible without magnification equipment for example Outside of bites rabies virus exposure can also occur if infected fluids come in contact with a mucous membrane or a break in the skin 58 Other Edit Many bat lyssaviruses are not associated with infection in humans These include Lagos bat lyssavirus Shimoni bat lyssavirus Khujand lyssavirus Aravan lyssavirus Bokeloh bat lyssavirus West Caucasian bat lyssavirus and Lleida bat lyssavirus 52 51 Lagos bat lyssavirus also known as Lagos bat virus LBV has been isolated from a megabat in sub Saharan Africa 51 This lyssavirus has four distinct lineages all of which are found in the straw colored fruit bat 59 Rhabdoviruses from other genera have been identified in bats This includes several from the genus Ledantevirus Kern Canyon virus which was found in the Yuma myotis in California US Kolente virus from the Jones s roundleaf bat in Guinea 60 Mount Elgon bat virus from the eloquent horseshoe bat in Kenya Oita virus from the little Japanese horseshoe bat and Fikirini virus from the striped leaf nosed bat in Kenya 61 Orthomyxoviruses Edit The circulation of influenza A viruses Influenza A viruses in bats possibly originated in birds Orthomyxoviruses include influenza viruses While birds are the primary reservoir for the genus Alphainfluenzavirus a few bat species in Central and South America have also tested positive for the viruses These species include the little yellow shouldered bat and the flat faced fruit eating bat Bat populations tested in Guatemala and Peru had high seropositivity rates which suggests that influenza A infections are common among bats in the New World 18 Paramyxoviruses Edit Hendra Nipah and Menangle viruses Edit Date palm sap collection a primary exposure route for Nipah virusParamyxoviridae is a family that includes several zoonotic viruses naturally found in bats Two are in the genus Henipavirus Hendra virus and Nipah virus Hendra virus was first identified in 1994 in Hendra Australia Four different species of flying fox have tested positive for Hendra virus the gray headed flying fox little red flying fox spectacled flying fox and black flying fox 62 Horses are the intermediate host between flying foxes and humans Between 1994 and 2014 there were fifty five outbreaks of Hendra virus in Australia resulting in the death or euthanization of eighty eight horses Seven humans are known to have been infected by Hendra virus with four fatalities 16 Six of the seven infected humans were directly exposed to the blood or other fluids of sick or dead horses three were veterinarians while the seventh case was a veterinary nurse who had recently irrigated the nasal cavity of a horse not yet exhibiting symptoms It is unclear how horses become infected with Hendra virus though it is believed to occur following direct exposure to flying fox fluids There is also evidence of horse to horse transmission In late 2012 a vaccine was released to prevent infection in horses 62 Vaccine uptake has been low with an estimated 11 17 of Australian horses vaccinated by 2017 63 The first human outbreak of Nipah virus was in 1998 in Malaysia 16 It was determined that flying foxes were also the reservoir of the virus with domestic pigs as the intermediate host between bats and humans Outbreaks have also occurred in Bangladesh India Singapore and the Philippines In Bangladesh the primary mode of transmission of Nipah virus to humans is through the consumption of date palm sap Pots set out to collect the sap are contaminated with flying fox urine and guano and the bats also lick the sap streams flowing into the pots It has been speculated that the virus may also be transmitted to humans by eating fruit partially consumed by flying foxes or by coming into contact with their urine though no definitive evidence supports this 64 An additional zoonotic paramyxovirus that bats harbor is Menangle virus which was first identified at a hog farm in New South Wales Australia Flying foxes were once again identified as the natural reservoirs of the virus with the black spectacled and gray headed seropositive for the virus Two employees of the hog farm became sick with flu like illnesses later shown to be a result of the virus 16 Sosuga pararubulavirus is known to have infected one person an American wildlife biologist who had conducted bat and rodent research in Uganda 16 The Egyptian fruit bat later tested positive for the virus indicating that it is potentially a natural reservoir 65 Other Edit Bats host several paramyxoviruses that are not known to affect humans Bats are the reservoir of Cedar virus a paramyxovirus first discovered in flying foxes South East Queensland 16 The zoonotic potential of Cedar virus is unknown 66 In Brazil in 1979 Mapuera orthorubulavirus was isolated from the saliva of the little yellow shouldered bat Mapuera virus has never been associated with disease in other animals or humans but experimental exposure of mice to the virus resulted in fatality 16 Tioman pararubulavirus has been isolated from the urine of the small flying fox which causes fever in some domestic pigs after exposure but no other symptoms Tukoko virus has been detected from Leschenault s rousette in China 16 Bats have been suggested as the host of Porcine orthorubulavirus though definitive evidence has not been collected 16 Togaviruses Edit Togaviruses include alphaviruses which have been detected in bats Alphaviruses cause encephalitis in humans Alphaviruses that have been detected in bats include Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus Eastern equine encephalitis virus and Western equine encephalitis virus Sindbis virus has been detected from horseshoe bats and roundleaf bats Chikungunya virus has been isolated from Leschenault s rousette the Egyptian fruit bat Sundevall s roundleaf bat the little free tailed bat and Scotophilus species 18 Positive sense single stranded RNA viruses that replicate through a DNA intermediate EditMain article ssRNA RT virus Retroviruses Edit Bats can be infected with retroviruses including the gammaretrovirus found in horseshoe bats Leschenault s rousette and the greater false vampire bat Several bat retroviruses have been identified that are similar to the Reticuloendotheliosis virus found in birds These retroviruses were found in mouse eared bats horseshoe bats and flying foxes The discovery of varied and distinct gammaretroviruses in bat genomes indicates that bats likely played important roles in their diversification Bats also host an extensive number of betaretroviruses including within mouse eared bats horseshoe bats and flying foxes Bat betaretroviruses span the entire breadth of betaretrovirus diversity similar to those of rodents which may indicate that bats and rodents are primary reservoirs of the viruses Betaretroviruses have infected bats for a majority of bat evolutionary history since at least 36 million years ago 67 Double stranded DNA viruses that replicate through a single stranded RNA intermediate Edit Hepadnaviruses have been identified in the tent making bat which is native to Central and South AmericaMain article dsDNA RT virus Hepadnaviruses Edit Hepadnaviruses are also known to affect bats with the tent making bat Noack s roundleaf bat and the halcyon horseshoe bat known to harbor several The hepadnavirus found in the tent making bat which is a New World species was the closest relative of human hepadnaviruses 67 Though relatively few hepadnaviruses have been identified in bats it is highly likely that additional strains will be discovered through further research As of 2016 they had been found in four bat families Hipposideridae and Rhinolophidae from the suborder Yinpterochiroptera and Molossidae and Vespertilionidae from Yangochiroptera The high diversity of bat hosts suggests that bats share a long evolutionary history with hepadnaviruses indicating bats may have had an important role in hepadnavirus evolution 68 See also Edit Viruses portalHistoplasmosis Human viromeReferences Edit a b Calisher C H Childs J E Field H E Holmes K V Schountz T 2006 Bats Important Reservoir Hosts of Emerging Viruses Clinical Microbiology Reviews 19 3 531 545 doi 10 1128 CMR 00017 06 PMC 1539106 PMID 16847084 Moratelli Ricardo Calisher Charles H 2015 Bats and zoonotic viruses Can we confidently link bats with emerging deadly viruses Memorias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz 110 1 1 22 doi 10 1590 0074 02760150048 PMC 4371215 PMID 25742261 An increasingly asked question is can we confidently link bats with emerging viruses No or not yet is the qualified answer based on the evidence available a b MacKenzie John S Smith David W 2020 COVID 19 A novel zoonotic disease caused by a coronavirus from China What we know and what we don t Microbiology Australia 41 45 doi 10 1071 MA20013 PMC 7086482 PMID 32226946 Evidence from the sequence analyses clearly indicates that the reservoir host of the virus was a bat probably a Chinese or Intermediate horseshoe bat and it is probable that like SARS CoV an intermediate host was the source of the outbreak a b Olival Kevin J Weekley Cristin C Daszak Peter 2015 Are Bats Really Special as Viral Reservoirs What We Know and Need to Know Bats and Viruses pp 281 294 doi 10 1002 9781118818824 ch11 ISBN 978 1118818824 a b Mollentze Nardus Streicker Daniel G 2020 Viral zoonotic risk is homogenous among taxonomic orders of mammalian and avian reservoir hosts Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 117 17 9423 9430 Bibcode 2020PNAS 117 9423M doi 10 1073 pnas 1919176117 PMC 7196766 PMID 32284401 a b c Letko Michael Seifert Stephanie N Olival Kevin J Plowright Raina K Munster Vincent J 2020 Bat borne virus diversity spillover and emergence Nature Reviews Microbiology 18 8 461 471 doi 10 1038 s41579 020 0394 z PMC 7289071 PMID 32528128 a b c d e f g h i Hayman David T S 2016 Bats as Viral Reservoirs Annual Review of Virology 3 1 77 99 doi 10 1146 annurev virology 110615 042203 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Ahn Matae Anderson Danielle E Zhang Qian Tan Chee Wah Lim Beng Lee Luko Katarina Wen Ming Chia Wan Ni Mani Shailendra Wang Loo Chien et al 2019 Dampened NLRP3 mediated inflammation in bats and implications for a special viral reservoir host Nature Microbiology 4 5 789 799 doi 10 1038 s41564 019 0371 3 PMC 7096966 PMID 30804542 Yong Kylie Su Mei Ng Justin Han Jia Her Zhisheng Hey Ying Ying Tan Sue Yee Tan Wilson Wei Sheng Irac Sergio Erdal Liu Min Chan Xue Ying Gunawan Merry et al 2018 Bat mouse bone marrow chimera A novel animal model for dissecting the uniqueness of the bat immune system Scientific Reports 8 1 4726 Bibcode 2018NatSR 8 4726Y doi 10 1038 s41598 018 22899 1 PMC 5856848 PMID 29549333 a b c Joffrin Lea Dietrich Muriel Mavingui Patrick Lebarbenchon Camille 2018 Bat pathogens hit the road But which one PLOS Pathogens 14 8 e1007134 doi 10 1371 journal ppat 1007134 PMC 6085074 PMID 30092093 a b c d e f g h i Anderson Danielle E Marsh Glenn A 2015 Bat Paramyxoviruses Bats and Viruses pp 99 126 doi 10 1002 9781118818824 ch4 ISBN 978 1118818824 Young Cristin C W Olival Kevin J 2016 Optimizing Viral Discovery in Bats PLOS ONE 11 2 e0149237 Bibcode 2016PLoSO 1149237Y doi 10 1371 journal pone 0149237 PMC 4750870 PMID 26867024 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Queen Krista Shi Mang Anderson Larry J Tong Suxiang 2015 Other Bat Borne Viruses Bats and Viruses pp 217 247 doi 10 1002 9781118818824 ch9 ISBN 9781118818824 ICTV Master Species List 2018b v2 International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses ICTV Retrieved 19 June 2019 dead link Cibulski S P Teixeira T F De Sales Lima F E Do Santos H F Franco A C Roehe P M 2014 A Novel Anelloviridae Species Detected in Tadarida brasiliensis Bats First Sequence of a Chiropteran Anellovirus Genome Announcements 2 5 doi 10 1128 genomeA 01028 14 PMC 4214982 PMID 25359906 De Souza William Marciel Fumagalli Marcilio Jorge De Araujo Jansen Sabino Santos Gilberto Maia Felipe Goncalves Motta Romeiro Marilia Farignoli Modha Sejal Nardi 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member of the Pteropine Orthoreovirus species isolated from fruit bats imported to Italy Infection Genetics and Evolution 30 55 58 doi 10 1016 j meegid 2014 12 006 PMID 25497353 a b c d e Kohl Claudia Kurth Andreas 2015 Bat Reoviruses Bats and Viruses pp 203 215 doi 10 1002 9781118818824 ch8 ISBN 9781118818824 Tan Yeh Fong Teng Cheong Lieng Chua Kaw Bing Voon Kenny 2017 Pteropine orthoreovirus An important emerging virus causing infectious disease in the tropics The Journal of Infection in Developing Countries 11 3 215 219 doi 10 3855 jidc 9112 PMID 28368854 Kocher Jacob F Lindesmith Lisa C Debbink Kari Beall Anne Mallory Michael L Yount Boyd L Graham Rachel L Huynh Jeremy Gates J Edward Donaldson Eric F et al 2018 Bat Caliciviruses and Human Noroviruses Are Antigenically Similar and Have Overlapping Histo Blood Group Antigen Binding Profiles mBio 9 3 doi 10 1128 mBio 00869 18 PMC 5964351 PMID 29789360 a b c d e f Ge Xing Yi Hu Ben Shi Zheng Li 2015 Bat Coronaviruses Bats and Viruses pp 127 155 doi 10 1002 9781118818824 ch5 ISBN 978 1118818824 Zhou Peng Yang Xing Lou Wang Xian Guang Hu Ben Zhang Lei Zhang Wei Si Hao Rui Zhu Yan Li Bei Huang Chao Lin et al 2020 A pneumonia outbreak associated with a new coronavirus of probable bat origin Nature 579 7798 270 273 Bibcode 2020Natur 579 270Z doi 10 1038 s41586 020 2012 7 PMC 7095418 PMID 32015507 Novel Coronavirus 2019 nCoV Situation Report 22 PDF World Health Organization 11 February 2020 Retrieved 15 February 2020 Lu Guangwen Wang Qihui Gao George F 2015 Bat to human Spike features determining host jump of coronaviruses SARS CoV MERS CoV and beyond Trends in Microbiology 23 8 468 478 doi 10 1016 j tim 2015 06 003 PMC 7125587 PMID 26206723 Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus MERS CoV World Health Organization November 2019 Retrieved 5 April 2020 Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus MERS CoV World Health Organization 11 March 2019 Retrieved 5 April 2020 Nsikan Akpan 21 January 2020 New coronavirus can spread between humans but it started in a wildlife market National Geographic Retrieved 23 January 2020 Fenton M Brock Mubareka Samira Tsang Susan M Simmons Nancy B Becker Daniel J 2020 COVID 19 and threats to bats Facets 5 349 352 doi 10 1139 facets 2020 0028 Aizenman Nurith 20 February 2020 New Research Bats Harbor Hundreds Of Coronaviruses And Spillovers Aren t Rare NPR Retrieved 5 April 2020 Wacharapluesadee Supaporn Duengkae Prateep Rodpan Apaporn Kaewpom Thongchai Maneeorn Patarapol Kanchanasaka Budsabong Yingsakmongkon Sangchai Sittidetboripat Nuntaporn Chareesaen Chaiyaporn Khlangsap Nathawat et al 2015 Diversity of coronavirus in bats from Eastern Thailand Virology Journal 12 57 doi 10 1186 s12985 015 0289 1 PMC 4416284 PMID 25884446 a b c d e f Arai Satoru Aoki Keita Sơn Nguyễn Trường Tu Vương Tan Kikuchi Fuka Kinoshita Gohta Fukui Dai Thanh Hoang Trung Gu Se Hun Yoshikawa Yasuhiro et al 2019 Đakrong virus a novel mobatvirus Hantaviridae harbored by the Stoliczka s Asian trident bat Aselliscus stoliczkanus in Vietnam Scientific Reports 9 1 10239 Bibcode 2019NatSR 910239A doi 10 1038 s41598 019 46697 5 PMC 6629698 PMID 31308502 Xu Lin Wu Jianmin He Biao Qin Shaomin Xia Lele Qin Minchao Li Nan Tu Changchun 2015 Novel hantavirus identified in black bearded tomb bats China Infection Genetics and Evolution 31 158 160 doi 10 1016 j meegid 2015 01 018 PMC 7172206 PMID 25643870 a b c d e f g Maganga Gael Darren Rougeron Virginie Leroy Eric Maurice 2015 Bat Filoviruses Bats and Viruses pp 157 175 doi 10 1002 9781118818824 ch6 ISBN 9781118818824 a b Ebola virus disease World Health Organization 10 February 2020 Retrieved 13 April 2020 a b What is Ebola Virus Disease Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 5 November 2019 Retrieved 13 April 2020 Scientists do not know where Ebola virus comes from Rewar Suresh Mirdha Dashrath 2015 Transmission of Ebola Virus Disease An Overview Annals of Global Health 80 6 444 451 doi 10 1016 j aogh 2015 02 005 PMID 25960093 Despite concerted investigative efforts the natural reservoir of the virus is unknown a b Baseler Laura Chertow Daniel S Johnson Karl M Feldmann Heinz Morens David M 2017 The Pathogenesis of Ebola Virus Disease Annual Review of Pathology Mechanisms of Disease 12 387 418 doi 10 1146 annurev pathol 052016 100506 PMID 27959626 The geographic ranges of many animal species including bats squirrels mice and rats dormice and shrews match or overlap with known outbreak sites of African filoviruses but none of these mammals has yet been universally accepted as an EBOV reservoir von Csefalvay Chris 2023 Host vector and multihost systems Computational Modeling of Infectious Disease Elsevier pp 121 149 doi 10 1016 b978 0 32 395389 4 00013 x ISBN 978 0 323 95389 4 retrieved 2 March 2023 Olivero Jesus Fa John E Real Raimundo Farfan Miguel Angel Marquez Ana Luz Vargas J Mario Gonzalez J Paul Cunningham Andrew A Nasi Robert 2017 Mammalian biogeography and the Ebola virus in Africa PDF Mammal Review 47 24 37 doi 10 1111 mam 12074 We found published evidence from cases of serological and or polymerase chain reaction PCR positivity of EVD in non human mammal or of EVD linked mortality in 28 mammal species 10 primates three rodents one shrew eight bats one carnivore and five ungulates a b c d Marburg virus disease World Health Organization 15 February 2018 Retrieved 14 April 2020 Yang Xing Lou Tan Chee Wah Anderson Danielle E Jiang Ren Di Li Bei Zhang Wei Zhu Yan Lim Xiao Fang Zhou Peng Liu Xiang Ling et al 2019 Characterization of a filovirus Mengla virus from Rousettus bats in China Nature Microbiology 4 3 390 395 doi 10 1038 s41564 018 0328 y PMID 30617348 S2CID 57574565 a b c Filoviruses Ebola and Marburg Viruses BU Research Support 12 June 2019 Retrieved 14 April 2020 Edwards Megan R Basler Christopher F 2019 Current status of small molecule drug development for Ebola virus and other filoviruses Current Opinion in Virology 35 42 56 doi 10 1016 j coviro 2019 03 001 PMC 6556423 PMID 31003196 a b c d e f g h i j Kuzmin Ivan V Rupprecht Charles E 2015 Bat Lyssaviruses Bats and Viruses pp 47 97 doi 10 1002 9781118818824 ch3 ISBN 978 1118818824 a b c d Banyard Ashley C Hayman David Johnson Nicholas McElhinney Lorraine Fooks Anthony R 2011 Bats and Lyssaviruses Research Advances in Rabies Advances in Virus Research Vol 79 pp 239 289 doi 10 1016 B978 0 12 387040 7 00012 3 ISBN 978 0123870407 PMID 21601050 Calisher Charles H 2015 Viruses in Bats Bats and Viruses pp 23 45 doi 10 1002 9781118818824 ch2 ISBN 978 1118818824 Klug BJ Turmelle AS Ellison JA Baerwald EF Barclay RM 2010 Rabies prevalence in migratory tree bats in Alberta and the influence of roosting ecology and sampling method on reported prevalence of rabies in bats Journal of Wildlife Diseases 47 1 64 77 doi 10 7589 0090 3558 47 1 64 PMID 21269998 Rabies www who int Retrieved 8 July 2020 a b Calderon Alfonso Guzman Camilo Mattar Salim Rodriguez Virginia Acosta Arles Martinez Caty 2019 Frugivorous bats in the Colombian Caribbean region are reservoirs of the rabies virus Annals of Clinical Microbiology and Antimicrobials 18 1 11 doi 10 1186 s12941 019 0308 y PMC 6423830 PMID 30890183 Brock Fenton M Streicker Daniel G Racey Paul A Tuttle Merlin D Medellin Rodrigo A Daley Mark J Recuenco Sergio Bakker Kevin M 2020 Knowledge gaps about rabies transmission from vampire bats to humans Nature Ecology amp Evolution 4 4 517 518 doi 10 1038 s41559 020 1144 3 PMC 7896415 PMID 32203471 S2CID 212732288 a b Messenger Sharon L Smith Jean S Rupprecht Charles E 2002 Emerging Epidemiology of Bat Associated Cryptic Cases of Rabies in Humans in the United States Clinical Infectious Diseases 35 6 738 747 doi 10 1086 342387 PMID 12203172 Suu Ire Richard Begeman Lineke Banyard Ashley C Breed Andrew C Drosten Christian Eggerbauer Elisa Freuling Conrad M Gibson Louise Goharriz Hooman Horton Daniel L et al 2018 Pathogenesis of bat rabies in a natural reservoir Comparative susceptibility of the straw colored fruit bat Eidolon helvum to three strains of Lagos bat virus PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases 12 3 e0006311 doi 10 1371 journal pntd 0006311 PMC 5854431 PMID 29505617 Blasdell Kim R Widen Steven G Wood Thomas G Holmes Edward C Vasilakis Nikos Tesh Robert B Walker Peter J Guzman Hilda Firth Cadhla 2015 Ledantevirus A Proposed New Genus in the Rhabdoviridae has a Strong Ecological Association with Bats The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 92 2 405 410 doi 10 4269 ajtmh 14 0606 PMC 4347348 PMID 25487727 Walker Peter J Firth Cadhla Widen Steven G Blasdell Kim R Guzman Hilda Wood Thomas G Paradkar Prasad N Holmes Edward C Tesh Robert B Vasilakis Nikos 2015 Evolution of Genome Size and Complexity in the Rhabdoviridae PLOS Pathogens 11 2 e1004664 doi 10 1371 journal ppat 1004664 PMC 4334499 PMID 25679389 a b Middleton Deborah 2014 Hendra Virus Veterinary Clinics of North America Equine Practice 30 3 579 589 doi 10 1016 j cveq 2014 08 004 PMC 4252762 PMID 25281398 Manyweathers J Field H Longnecker N Agho K Smith C Taylor M 2017 Why won t they just vaccinate Horse owner risk perception and uptake of the Hendra virus vaccine BMC Veterinary Research 13 1 103 doi 10 1186 s12917 017 1006 7 PMC 5390447 PMID 28407738 Aditi Shariff M 2019 Nipah virus infection A review Epidemiology and Infection 147 e95 doi 10 1017 S0950268819000086 PMC 6518547 PMID 30869046 Amman Brian R Albarino Cesar G Bird Brian H Nyakarahuka Luke Sealy Tara K Balinandi Stephen Schuh Amy J Campbell Shelly M Stroher Ute Jones Megan E B et al 2015 A Recently Discovered Pathogenic Paramyxovirus Sosuga Virus is Present in Rousettus aegyptiacus Fruit Bats at Multiple Locations in Uganda Journal of Wildlife Diseases 51 3 774 779 doi 10 7589 2015 02 044 PMC 5022529 PMID 25919464 Laing Eric D Navaratnarajah Chanakha K Cheliout Da Silva Sofia Petzing Stephanie R Xu Yan Sterling Spencer L Marsh Glenn A Wang Lin Fa Amaya Moushimi Nikolov Dimitar B et al 2019 Structural and functional analyses reveal promiscuous and species specific use of ephrin receptors by Cedar virus Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 116 41 20707 20715 Bibcode 2019PNAS 11620707L doi 10 1073 pnas 1911773116 PMC 6789926 PMID 31548390 a b Tachedjian Gilda Hayward Joshua A Cui Jie 2015 Bats and Reverse Transcribing RNA and DNA Viruses Bats and Viruses pp 177 201 doi 10 1002 9781118818824 ch7 ISBN 9781118818824 Rasche Andrea Souza Breno Frederico de Carvalho Dominguez Drexler Jan Felix 2016 Bat hepadnaviruses and the origins of primate hepatitis B viruses Current Opinion in Virology 16 86 94 doi 10 1016 j coviro 2016 01 015 PMID 26897577 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bat virome amp oldid 1170602838, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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