Department of Wildlife, Fish, and Environmental Studies, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Umeå, Sweden.
Vector Borne Zoonotic Dis. 2010 Aug;10(6):549-61. doi: 10.1089/vbz.2009.0138.
Five hantaviruses are known to circulate among rodents in Europe, and at least two among insectivores. Four (Dobrava, Saaremaa, Seoul, and Puumala [PUUV] viruses) are clearly associated with hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS). PUUV, the most common etiological agent of HFRS in Europe, is carried by the bank vole (Myodes glareolus), one of the most widespread and abundant mammal species in Europe. This host-virus system is among hantaviruses also the most studied one in Europe. However, HFRS incidence varies throughout the continent. The spatial as well as temporal variation in the occurrence of HFRS is linked to geographic differences in the population dynamics of the reservoir rodents in different biomes of Europe. While rodent abundance may follow mast seeding events in many parts of temperate Europe, in northern (N) Europe multiannual cycles in population density exist as the result of the interaction between rodent populations and specialist predator populations in a delayed density-dependent manner. The spatial distribution of hantaviruses further depends on parameters such as forest patch size and connectivity of the most suitable rodent habitats, and the conditions for the survival of the virus outside the host, as well as historical distribution patterns (phylogeographies) of hosts and viruses. In multiannually fluctuating populations of rodents, with population increases of great amplitude, one should expect a simultaneous build-up of recently hantavirus-infected (shedding) rodents. The increasing number of infectious, virus-shedding rodents leads to a rapid transmission of hantavirus across the rodent population, and to humans. Our review discusses these aspects for PUUV, the only European hantavirus for which there is a reasonable, yet still far from complete, ecological continental-wide understanding. We discuss how this information could translate to other European hantavirus-host systems, and where the most important questions lie for further research.
已知有五种汉坦病毒在欧洲的啮齿动物中循环,至少有两种在食虫动物中。其中四种(Dobrava、Saaremaa、Seoul 和 Puumala [PUUV] 病毒)与肾综合征出血热(HFRS)明显相关。PUUV 是欧洲 HFRS 最常见的病原体,由欧洲分布最广、数量最多的哺乳动物之一——田鼠携带。这种宿主-病毒系统也是欧洲汉坦病毒研究最多的系统之一。然而,HFRS 的发病率在整个欧洲大陆有所不同。HFRS 的发生在空间和时间上的变化与欧洲不同生物群落中储存宿主啮齿动物种群动态的地理差异有关。虽然在温带欧洲的许多地区,啮齿动物的丰度可能会跟随花粉传播事件,但在北欧,由于啮齿动物种群与专业捕食者种群之间以延迟密度依赖方式相互作用,导致种群密度存在多年周期。汉坦病毒的空间分布进一步取决于参数,如森林斑块大小和最适合啮齿动物栖息地的连通性,以及病毒在宿主外生存的条件,以及宿主和病毒的历史分布模式(系统地理学)。在啮齿动物多年波动的种群中,由于种群增加幅度很大,人们应该期望最近感染(脱落)汉坦病毒的啮齿动物同时增加。越来越多的具有传染性、病毒脱落的啮齿动物会导致汉坦病毒在啮齿动物种群中迅速传播,并传播给人类。我们的综述讨论了这些方面对于 PUUV 的情况,PUUV 是欧洲唯一一种有合理但仍远不完整的生态大陆范围理解的汉坦病毒。我们讨论了这些信息如何转化为其他欧洲汉坦病毒-宿主系统,以及进一步研究的最重要问题在哪里。