Beechler B R, Bengis R, Swanepoel R, Paweska J T, Kemp A, van Vuren P Jansen, Joubert J, Ezenwa V O, Jolles A E
College of Veterinary Medicine, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, USA.
Transbound Emerg Dis. 2015 Feb;62(1):24-32. doi: 10.1111/tbed.12197. Epub 2013 Dec 12.
Rift Valley fever (RVF) is a zoonotic mosquito-borne virus disease of livestock and wild ruminants that has been identified as a risk for international spread. Typically, the disease occurs in geographically limited outbreaks associated with high rainfall events and can cause massive losses of livestock. It is unclear how RVF virus persists during inter-epidemic periods but cryptic cycling of the virus in wildlife populations may play a role. We investigated the role that free-living African buffalo (Syncerus caffer caffer) might play in inter-epidemic circulation of the virus and looked for geographic, age and sex patterns of Rift Valley fever virus (RVFV) infection in African buffalo. Buffalo serum samples were collected (n = 1615) in Kruger National Park (KNP), South Africa, during a period of 1996-2007 and tested for antibodies to RVF. We found that older animals were more likely to be seropositive for anti-RVFV antibody than younger animals, but sex was not correlated with the likelihood of being anti-RVFV antibody positive. We also found geographic variation within KNP; herds in the south were more likely to have acquired anti-RVFV antibody than herds farther north - which could be driven by host or vector ecology. In all years of the study between 1996 and 2007, we found young buffalo (under 2 years of age) that were seropositive for anti-RVFV antibody, with prevalence ranging between 0 and 27% each year, indicating probable circulation. In addition, we also conducted a 4-year longitudinal study on 227 initially RVFV seronegative buffalo to look for evidence of seroconversion outside known RVF outbreaks within our study period (2008-2012). In the longitudinal study, we found five individuals that seroconverted from anti-RVFV antibody negative to anti-RVFV antibody positive, outside of any detected outbreak. Overall, our results provide evidence of long-term undetected circulation of RVFV in the buffalo population.
裂谷热(RVF)是一种由蚊子传播的人畜共患病毒病,主要感染家畜和野生反刍动物,已被确定存在国际传播风险。通常情况下,该病会在与高降雨事件相关的地理范围内爆发,并可能导致家畜大量死亡。目前尚不清楚裂谷热病毒在疫情间歇期如何持续存在,但病毒在野生动物种群中的隐秘循环可能起到了一定作用。我们调查了自由放养的非洲水牛(非洲野水牛指名亚种)在病毒疫情间歇期传播中可能扮演的角色,并寻找非洲水牛中裂谷热病毒(RVFV)感染的地理、年龄和性别模式。1996年至2007年期间,在南非克鲁格国家公园(KNP)采集了水牛血清样本(n = 1615),并检测了抗裂谷热抗体。我们发现,年龄较大的动物比年龄较小的动物更有可能抗RVFV抗体呈血清阳性,但性别与抗RVFV抗体呈阳性的可能性无关。我们还发现了KNP内的地理差异;南部的牛群比北部更远的牛群更有可能获得抗RVFV抗体,这可能是由宿主或媒介生态驱动的。在1996年至2007年的所有研究年份中,我们都发现了抗RVFV抗体呈血清阳性的幼年水牛(2岁以下),每年的患病率在0%至27%之间,表明可能存在病毒循环。此外,我们还对227头最初RVFV血清学阴性的水牛进行了为期4年的纵向研究,以寻找在我们的研究期间(2008 - 2012年)已知裂谷热疫情之外血清转化的证据。在纵向研究中,我们发现有5只个体在未检测到任何疫情的情况下从抗RVFV抗体阴性转为抗RVFV抗体阳性。总体而言,我们的结果提供了RVFV在水牛种群中长期未被检测到的病毒循环的证据。