Institute of Biodiversity, Animal Health and Comparative Medicine, College of Medical, Veterinary and Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QQ, Scotland;
Medical Research Center-University of Glasgow Centre for Virus Research, Glasgow G61 1QH, Scotland.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2021 Jan 19;118(3). doi: 10.1073/pnas.2019907118.
Hepatitis delta virus (HDV) is an unusual RNA agent that replicates using host machinery but exploits hepatitis B virus (HBV) to mobilize its spread within and between hosts. In doing so, HDV enhances the virulence of HBV. How this seemingly improbable hyperparasitic lifestyle emerged is unknown, but it underpins the likelihood that HDV and related deltaviruses may alter other host-virus interactions. Here, we show that deltaviruses diversify by transmitting between mammalian species. Among 96,695 RNA sequence datasets, deltaviruses infected bats, rodents, and an artiodactyl from the Americas but were absent from geographically overrepresented Old World representatives of each mammalian order, suggesting a relatively recent diversification within the Americas. Consistent with diversification by host shifting, both bat and rodent-infecting deltaviruses were paraphyletic, and coevolutionary modeling rejected cospeciation with mammalian hosts. In addition, a 2-y field study showed common vampire bats in Peru were infected by two divergent deltaviruses, indicating multiple introductions to a single host species. One vampire bat-associated deltavirus was detected in the saliva of up to 35% of individuals, formed phylogeographically compartmentalized clades, and infected a sympatric bat, illustrating horizontal transmission within and between species on ecological timescales. Consistent absence of HBV-like viruses in two deltavirus-infected bat species indicated acquisitions of novel viral associations during the divergence of bat and human-infecting deltaviruses. Our analyses support an American zoonotic origin of HDV and reveal prospects for future cross-species emergence of deltaviruses. Given their peculiar life history, deltavirus host shifts will have different constraints and disease outcomes compared to ordinary animal pathogens.
乙型肝炎 delta 病毒(HDV)是一种特殊的 RNA 病毒,它利用宿主机制进行复制,但利用乙型肝炎病毒(HBV)在宿主内部和之间传播。这样,HDV 增强了 HBV 的毒力。这种看似不可能的超寄生生活方式是如何出现的尚不清楚,但这增加了 HDV 和相关的 delta 病毒可能改变其他宿主-病毒相互作用的可能性。在这里,我们表明 delta 病毒通过在哺乳动物物种之间传播而多样化。在 96695 个 RNA 序列数据集中,delta 病毒感染了来自美洲的蝙蝠、啮齿动物和偶蹄目动物,但在地理上代表每个哺乳动物目代表的旧世界代表中不存在,这表明在美洲相对较新的多样化。与通过宿主转移的多样化一致,蝙蝠和啮齿动物感染的 delta 病毒都是并系的,共进化模型拒绝与哺乳动物宿主的协同进化。此外,为期 2 年的野外研究表明,秘鲁的常见吸血蝙蝠被两种不同的 delta 病毒感染,表明对单个宿主物种的多次引入。在秘鲁,多达 35%的个体唾液中检测到一种与吸血蝙蝠相关的 delta 病毒,表明在生态时间尺度上在物种内和物种间发生了水平传播。两种 delta 病毒感染的蝙蝠物种中均未检测到 HBV 样病毒,表明在蝙蝠和人类感染的 delta 病毒分化过程中获得了新的病毒关联。我们的分析支持 HDV 的美洲人畜共患起源,并揭示了未来 delta 病毒跨物种出现的前景。鉴于它们特殊的生活史,delta 病毒的宿主转移将与普通动物病原体的转移具有不同的限制和疾病后果。