Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Rega Institute for Medical Research, Laboratory of Viral Metagenomics, KU Leuven-University of Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Rega Institute for Medical Research, Laboratory for Clinical and Epidemiological Virology, KU Leuven-University of Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.
mSphere. 2019 Jan 23;4(1):e00585-18. doi: 10.1128/mSphere.00585-18.
Diarrhea remains one of the most common causes of deaths in children. A limited number of studies have investigated the prevalence of enteric pathogens in Cameroon, and as in many other African countries, the cause of many diarrheal episodes remains unexplained. A proportion of these unknown cases of diarrhea are likely caused by yet-unidentified viral agents, some of which could be the result of (recent) interspecies transmission from animal reservoirs, like bats. Using viral metagenomics, we screened fecal samples of 221 humans (almost all with gastroenteritis symptoms) between 0 and 89 years of age with different degrees of bat contact. We identified viruses belonging to families that are known to cause gastroenteritis such as , , , , and Interestingly, a mammalian orthoreovirus, picobirnaviruses, a smacovirus, and a pecovirus were also found. Although there was no evidence of interspecies transmission of the most common human gastroenteritis-related viruses (, , and ), the phylogenies of the identified orthoreovirus, picobirnavirus, and smacovirus indicate a genetic relatedness of these viruses identified in stools of humans and those of bats and/or other animals. These findings points out the possibility of interspecies transmission or simply a shared host of these viruses (bacterial, fungal, parasitic, …) present in both animals (bats) and humans. Further screening of bat viruses in humans or vice versa will elucidate the epidemiological potential threats of animal viruses to human health. Furthermore, this study showed a huge diversity of highly divergent novel phages, thereby expanding the existing phageome considerably. Despite the availability of diagnostic tools for different enteric viral pathogens, a large fraction of human cases of gastroenteritis remains unexplained. This could be due to pathogens not tested for or novel divergent viruses of potential animal origin. Fecal virome analyses of Cameroonians showed a very diverse group of viruses, some of which are genetically related to those identified in animals. This is the first attempt to describe the gut virome of humans from Cameroon. Therefore, the data represent a baseline for future studies on enteric viral pathogens in this area and contribute to our knowledge of the world's virome. The studies also highlight the fact that more viruses may be associated with diarrhea than the typical known ones. Hence, it provides meaningful epidemiological information on diarrhea-related viruses in this area.
腹泻仍然是儿童死亡的最常见原因之一。在喀麦隆,少数研究调查了肠病原体的流行情况,但与许多其他非洲国家一样,许多腹泻发作的原因仍未得到解释。这些未知腹泻病例中有一部分可能是由尚未确定的病毒引起的,其中一些可能是由于最近从动物宿主(如蝙蝠)发生种间传播。我们使用病毒宏基因组学方法,筛选了 221 名年龄在 0 至 89 岁之间的人类粪便样本,这些人都有不同程度的与蝙蝠接触。我们发现了属于已知引起胃肠炎的家族的病毒,例如、、、和。有趣的是,还发现了哺乳动物呼肠孤病毒、微小双 RNA 病毒、smacovirus 和 pecovirus。虽然没有证据表明最常见的人类胃肠炎相关病毒(、和)发生种间传播,但鉴定出的呼肠孤病毒、微小双 RNA 病毒和 smacovirus 的系统发育表明,这些在人类粪便中发现的病毒与蝙蝠和/或其他动物的病毒具有遗传相关性。这些发现表明,这些病毒(细菌、真菌、寄生虫等)可能在动物(蝙蝠)和人类之间存在种间传播或共享宿主。进一步在人类中筛选蝙蝠病毒或反之亦然,将阐明动物病毒对人类健康的潜在流行病学威胁。此外,本研究显示了高度分化的新型噬菌体的巨大多样性,从而大大扩展了现有的噬菌体组。尽管有针对不同肠病毒病原体的诊断工具,但仍有很大一部分人类胃肠炎病例原因不明。这可能是由于未检测到病原体或具有潜在动物来源的新型分化病毒。喀麦隆人的粪便病毒组分析显示出一组非常多样化的病毒,其中一些与在动物中鉴定出的病毒在基因上有关。这是首次尝试描述喀麦隆人的肠道病毒组。因此,这些数据为该地区肠道病毒病原体的未来研究提供了基线,并为我们了解世界病毒组做出了贡献。这些研究还强调了这样一个事实,即与腹泻相关的病毒可能比典型的已知病毒更多。因此,它为该地区腹泻相关病毒提供了有意义的流行病学信息。