Seasonal shedding patterns of diverse henipavirus-related paramyxoviruses in Egyptian rousette bats

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Authors

Mortlock, Marinda
Geldenhuys, Marike
Muriel Dietrich
Epstein, Jonathan H.
Weyer, Jacqueline
Paweska, Janusz Tadeusz
Markotter, Wanda

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Nature Research

Abstract

Bat-borne viruses in the Henipavirus genus have been associated with zoonotic diseases of high morbidity and mortality in Asia and Australia. In Africa, the Egyptian rousette bat species (Rousettus aegyptiacus) is an important viral host in which Henipavirus-related viral sequences have previously been identified. We expanded these fndings by assessing the viral dynamics in a southern African bat population. A longitudinal study of henipavirus diversity and excretion dynamics identified 18 putative viral species circulating in a local population, three with difering seasonal dynamics, and the winter and spring periods posing a higher risk of virus spill over and transmission. The annual peaks in virus excretion are most likely driven by subadults and may be linked to the waning of maternal immunity and recolonization of the roost in early spring. These results provide insightful information into the bat-host relationship that can be extrapolated to other populations across Africa and be communicated to at-risk communities as a part of evidence-based public health education and prevention measures against pathogen spill over threats.

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Keywords

Egyptian rousette bat (Rousettus aegyptiacus), Bat-borne viruses, Henipavirus

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Citation

Mortlock, M., Geldenhuys, M., Dietrich, M. et al. Seasonal shedding patterns of diverse henipavirus-related paramyxoviruses in Egyptian rousette bats. Scientific Reports 11, 24262 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-03641-w.