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Identification and epidemiological analysis of a putative novel hantavirus in Australian flying foxes

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Smith, C. S., Underwood, D. J., Gordon, A., Pyne, M. J., Smyth, A., Genge, B., Driver, L., Mayer, D. G. and Oakey, J. (2024) Identification and epidemiological analysis of a putative novel hantavirus in Australian flying foxes. Virus Genes . ISSN 1572-994X

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Article Link: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11262-024-02113-3

Abstract

In July 2017, an investigation into the cause of neurological signs in a black flying fox (Pteropus alecto, family Pteropodidae) identified a putative novel hantavirus (Robina virus, ROBV, order Bunyavirales, family Hantaviridae, genus Mobatvirus) in its brain. Analysis of the evolutionary relationship between other hantaviruses using maximum-likelihood, a systematic Bayesian clustering approach, and a minimum spanning tree, all suggest that ROBV is most closely related to another Mobatvirus, Quezon virus, previously identified in the lung of a Philippine frugivorous bat (Rousettus amplexicaudatus, also family Pteropodidae). Subsequently, between March 2018 and October 2023, a total of 495 bats were opportunistically screened for ROBV with an experimental qRT-PCR. The total prevalence of ROBV RNA detected in Pteropus spp. was 4.2% (95% CI 2.8–6.4%). Binomial modelling identified that there was substantial evidence supporting an increase (P = 0.033) in the detection of ROBV RNA in bats in 2019 and 2020 suggesting of a possible transient epidemic. There was also moderate evidence to support the effect of season (P = 0.064), with peak detection in the cooler seasons, autumn, and winter, possibly driven by physiological and ecological factors similar to those already identified for other bat-borne viruses. This is Australia’s first reported putative hantavirus and its identification could expand the southern known range of hantaviruses in Australasia.

Item Type:Article
Corporate Creators:Department of Agriculture and Fisheries, Queensland
Business groups:Biosecurity Queensland, Animal Science
Keywords:Bat ; Epidemiology ; Hantavirus ; Infection dynamics ; Mobatvirus ; Pteropus
Subjects:Science > Zoology > Chordates. Vertebrates > Mammals
Animal culture > Small animal culture
Veterinary medicine > Veterinary virology
Veterinary medicine > Diseases of special classes of animals
Live Archive:14 Oct 2024 06:37
Last Modified:14 Oct 2024 06:37

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