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Assessing the zoonotic potential of a novel bat morbillivirus

Authors :
Satoshi Ikegame
Jillian C. Carmichael
Heather Wells
Robert L. Furler O’Brien
Joshua A. Acklin
Hsin-Ping Chiu
Kasopefoluwa Y. Oguntuyo
Robert M. Cox
Aum R. Patel
Shreyas Kowdle
Christian S. Stevens
Miles Eckley
Shijun Zhan
Jean K. Lim
Ethan C. Veit
Matthew Evans
Takao Hashiguchi
Edison Durigon
Tony Schountz
Jonathan H. Epstein
Richard K. Plemper
Peter Daszak
Simon J. Anthony
Benhur Lee
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

Bats are significant reservoir hosts for many viruses with zoonotic potential1. SARS-CoV-2, Ebola virus, and Nipah virus are examples of such viruses that have caused deadly epidemics and pandemics when spilled over from bats into human and animal populations2,3. Careful surveillance of viruses in bats is critical for identifying potential zoonotic pathogens. However, metagenomic surveys in bats often do not result in full-length viral sequences that can be used to regenerate such viruses for targeted characterization4. Here, we identify and characterize a novel morbillivirus from a vespertilionid bat species (Myotis riparius) in Brazil, which we term myotis bat morbillivirus (MBaMV). There are 7 species of morbilliviruses including measles virus (MeV), canine distemper virus (CDV) and rinderpest virus (RPV)5. All morbilliviruses cause severe disease in their natural hosts6–10, and pathogenicity is largely determined by species specific expression of canonical morbillivirus receptors, CD150/SLAMF111 and NECTIN412. MBaMV used Myotis spp CD150 much better than human and dog CD150 in fusion assays. We confirmed this using live MBaMV that was rescued by reverse genetics. Surprisingly, MBaMV replicated efficiently in primary human myeloid but not lymphoid cells. Furthermore, MBaMV replicated in human epithelial cells and used human NECTIN4 almost as well as MeV. Our results demonstrate the unusual ability of MBaMV to infect and replicate in some human cells that are critical for MeV pathogenesis and transmission. This raises the specter of zoonotic transmission of a bat morbillivirus.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........2fb63fb5b4e17d02637b94829c504503
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.09.17.460143