Subudhi Sonu, Rapin Noreen, Bollinger Trent K, Hill Janet E, Donaldson Michael E, Davy Christina M, Warnecke Lisa, Turner James M, Kyle Christopher J, Willis Craig K R, Misra Vikram
Department of Veterinary Microbiology, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada.
Department of Pathology, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada.
J Gen Virol. 2017 Sep;98(9):2297-2309. doi: 10.1099/jgv.0.000898. Epub 2017 Aug 25.
Bats are important reservoir hosts for emerging viruses, including coronaviruses that cause diseases in people. Although there have been several studies on the pathogenesis of coronaviruses in humans and surrogate animals, there is little information on the interactions of these viruses with their natural bat hosts. We detected a coronavirus in the intestines of 53/174 hibernating little brown bats (Myotis lucifugus), as well as in the lungs of some of these individuals. Interestingly, the presence of the virus was not accompanied by overt inflammation. Viral RNA amplified from little brown bats in this study appeared to be from two distinct clades. The sequences in clade 1 were very similar to the archived sequence derived from little brown bats and the sequences from clade 2 were more closely related to the archived sequence from big brown bats. This suggests that two closely related coronaviruses may circulate in little brown bats. Sequence variation among coronavirus detected from individual bats suggested that infection occurred prior to hibernation, and that the virus persisted for up to 4 months of hibernation in the laboratory. Based on the sequence of its genome, the coronavirus was placed in the Alphacoronavirus genus, along with some human coronaviruses, bat viruses and the porcine epidemic diarrhoea virus. The detection and identification of an apparently persistent coronavirus in a local bat species creates opportunities to understand the dynamics of coronavirus circulation in bat populations.
蝙蝠是包括可导致人类疾病的冠状病毒在内的新兴病毒的重要储存宿主。尽管已有多项关于冠状病毒在人类和替代动物中发病机制的研究,但关于这些病毒与其天然蝙蝠宿主相互作用的信息却很少。我们在174只正在冬眠的小棕蝠(小棕蝠)中的53只的肠道中检测到了一种冠状病毒,其中一些个体的肺部也检测到了该病毒。有趣的是,病毒的存在并未伴有明显的炎症。本研究从小棕蝠中扩增出的病毒RNA似乎来自两个不同的进化枝。进化枝1中的序列与从小棕蝠中获得的存档序列非常相似,而进化枝2中的序列与大棕蝠的存档序列关系更密切。这表明两种密切相关的冠状病毒可能在小棕蝠中传播。从个体蝙蝠中检测到的冠状病毒之间的序列变异表明,感染发生在冬眠之前,并且该病毒在实验室中在冬眠期间持续存在长达4个月。根据其基因组序列,该冠状病毒与一些人类冠状病毒、蝙蝠病毒和猪流行性腹泻病毒一起被归入α冠状病毒属。在当地蝙蝠物种中检测和鉴定出一种明显持续存在的冠状病毒,为了解冠状病毒在蝙蝠种群中的传播动态创造了机会。