Plowright Raina K, Eby Peggy, Hudson Peter J, Smith Ina L, Westcott David, Bryden Wayne L, Middleton Deborah, Reid Peter A, McFarlane Rosemary A, Martin Gerardo, Tabor Gary M, Skerratt Lee F, Anderson Dale L, Crameri Gary, Quammen David, Jordan David, Freeman Paul, Wang Lin-Fa, Epstein Jonathan H, Marsh Glenn A, Kung Nina Y, McCallum Hamish
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Montana State University, Bozeman, MT 59717, USA Center for Infectious Disease Dynamics, Pennsylvania State University, State College, PA, USA
School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of New South Wales, Sydney, New South Wales 2052, Australia.
Proc Biol Sci. 2015 Jan 7;282(1798):20142124. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2014.2124.
Viruses that originate in bats may be the most notorious emerging zoonoses that spill over from wildlife into domestic animals and humans. Understanding how these infections filter through ecological systems to cause disease in humans is of profound importance to public health. Transmission of viruses from bats to humans requires a hierarchy of enabling conditions that connect the distribution of reservoir hosts, viral infection within these hosts, and exposure and susceptibility of recipient hosts. For many emerging bat viruses, spillover also requires viral shedding from bats, and survival of the virus in the environment. Focusing on Hendra virus, but also addressing Nipah virus, Ebola virus, Marburg virus and coronaviruses, we delineate this cross-species spillover dynamic from the within-host processes that drive virus excretion to land-use changes that increase interaction among species. We describe how land-use changes may affect co-occurrence and contact between bats and recipient hosts. Two hypotheses may explain temporal and spatial pulses of virus shedding in bat populations: episodic shedding from persistently infected bats or transient epidemics that occur as virus is transmitted among bat populations. Management of livestock also may affect the probability of exposure and disease. Interventions to decrease the probability of virus spillover can be implemented at multiple levels from targeting the reservoir host to managing recipient host exposure and susceptibility.
源自蝙蝠的病毒可能是最臭名昭著的新发人畜共患病,它们从野生动物传播到家畜和人类身上。了解这些感染如何在生态系统中传播从而导致人类疾病,对公共卫生具有至关重要的意义。病毒从蝙蝠传播到人类需要一系列促成条件,这些条件将宿主的分布、这些宿主内的病毒感染以及受体宿主的暴露和易感性联系起来。对于许多新发蝙蝠病毒来说,跨物种传播还需要蝙蝠排出病毒,以及病毒在环境中的存活。以亨德拉病毒为例,并兼顾尼帕病毒、埃博拉病毒、马尔堡病毒和冠状病毒,我们描绘了这种跨物种传播的动态过程,从驱动病毒排泄的宿主内过程到增加物种间相互作用的土地利用变化。我们描述了土地利用变化可能如何影响蝙蝠与受体宿主之间的共存和接触。有两个假说来解释蝙蝠种群中病毒排泄的时间和空间脉冲:持续感染的蝙蝠间歇性排泄,或者病毒在蝙蝠种群中传播时发生的短暂流行。家畜管理也可能影响暴露和患病的概率。从针对宿主到管理受体宿主的暴露和易感性,可在多个层面实施降低病毒跨物种传播概率的干预措施。