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Viral metagenomics of six bat species in close contact with humans in southern China.

Authors :
Zheng, Xue-yan
Qiu, Min
Guan, Wei-jie
Li, Jin-ming
Chen, Shao-wei
Cheng, Ming-ji
Huo, Shu-ting
Chen, Zhong
Wu, Yi
Jiang, Li-na
Chen, Qing
Source :
Archives of Virology. Jan2018, Vol. 163 Issue 1, p73-88. 16p.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Accumulating studies have shown that bats could harbor various important pathogenic viruses that could be transmitted to humans and other animals. Extensive metagenomic studies of different organs/tissues from bats have revealed a large number of novel or divergent viruses. To elucidate viral diversity and epidemiological and phylogenetic characteristics, six pooled fecal samples from bats were generated (based on bat species and geographic regions characteristic for virome analysis). These contained 500 fecal samples from six bat species, collected in four geographic regions. Metagenomic analysis revealed a plethora of divergent viruses originally found in bats. Multiple contigs from influenza A virus and coronaviruses in bats shared high identity with those from humans, suggesting possible cross-species transmission, whereas a number of contigs, whose sequences were taxonomically classifiable within Alphapapillomavirus, Betaretrovirus, Alpharetrovirus, Varicellovirus, Cyprinivirus, Chlorovirus and Cucumovirus had low identity to viruses in existing databases, which indicated possible evolution of novel viral species. None of the established caliciviruses and picornaviruses were found in the 500 fecal specimens. Papillomaviruses with high amino acid identity were found in Scotophilus kuhlii and Rhinolophus blythi, challenging the hypotheses regarding the strict host specificity and co-evolution of papillomaviruses. Phylogenetic analysis showed that four bat rotavirus A strains might be tentative G3 strains, according to the Rotavirus Classification Working Group classification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03048608
Volume :
163
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Archives of Virology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
127145658
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00705-017-3570-3