Lenshin S V, Vishnevskaya T V, Romashin A V, Bulycheva Y I, Vyshemirsky O I, Solovyeva S A, Gitelman A K, Pazilin A S, Lvov D K, Hu B, Shi Z, Alkhovsky S V
Stavropol Plague Control Research Institute of Rospotrebnadzor.
D.I. Ivanovsky institute of virology of N.F Gamaleya national research center on epidemiology and microbiology of Ministry of health of Russian Federation.
Vopr Virusol. 2024 Dec 15;69(6):546-557. doi: 10.36233/0507-4088-279.
Bats are recognized as primary natural reservoirs for alpha- and betacoronaviruses. The interspecies transmission of bat coronaviruses to other mammalian hosts, including livestock and humans, can lead to epidemics, epizootics, and global pandemics.
This study aims to describe coronaviruses associated with horseshoe bats ( spp.) in the southern regions of the European part of Russia.
Fecal samples were collected from bats inhabiting caves on the southern macroslope of the Greater Caucasus (Sochi-Adler region) during 2020, 2021, and 2024. Viral genomes were detected and analyzed using high-throughput sequencing (NGS) and RT-PCR.
A novel alphacoronavirus, designated Kudep virus (GenBank acc. # PQ649435), was identified in . Presumably the Kudep virus represents a novel species within the subgenus of the genus The virus Showed 72% nucleotide identity to a Cardioderma bat coronavirus from Kenya and up to 67% nucleotide identity to the YN2012 virus group found in horseshoe bats in China. RT-PCR screening revealed active circulation of both Kudep virus and the previously described SARS-like betacoronavirus Khosta-1 in the study area. Infection rates in a single colony during autumn 2021 reached 59.2% and 70.5% for Kudep and Khosta-1, respectively. Frequent co-infections with both viruses were observed in individual bats.
Our findings expand the understanding of the distribution of bat alphacoronaviruses and their genetic diversity. We demonstrate the presence of a persistent natural foci of two potentially zoonotic bat coronaviruses, ecologically associated with in the southern European part of Russia.
蝙蝠被认为是甲型和乙型冠状病毒的主要天然宿主。蝙蝠冠状病毒跨物种传播到其他哺乳动物宿主,包括家畜和人类,可导致流行病、动物流行病和全球大流行。
本研究旨在描述俄罗斯欧洲部分南部地区与菊头蝠(菊头蝠属)相关的冠状病毒。
于2020年、2021年和2024年从居住在大高加索山脉南部宏观斜坡(索契-阿德勒地区)洞穴中的蝙蝠采集粪便样本。使用高通量测序(NGS)和逆转录聚合酶链反应(RT-PCR)检测和分析病毒基因组。
在菊头蝠中鉴定出一种新型甲型冠状病毒,命名为库德普病毒(GenBank登录号:PQ649435)。推测库德普病毒代表冠状病毒属副冠状病毒亚属内的一个新物种。该病毒与来自肯尼亚的一种心形蝠冠状病毒具有72%的核苷酸同一性,与在中国菊头蝠中发现的YN2012病毒组具有高达67%的核苷酸同一性。RT-PCR筛查显示,库德普病毒和先前描述的类严重急性呼吸综合征(SARS)乙型冠状病毒科斯塔-1在研究区域内均有活跃传播。2021年秋季,在单个菊头蝠群落中,库德普病毒和科斯塔-1的感染率分别达到59.2%和70.5%。在个体蝙蝠中观察到两种病毒频繁共同感染。
我们的研究结果扩展了对蝙蝠甲型冠状病毒分布及其遗传多样性的认识。我们证明了在俄罗斯欧洲部分南部存在两种潜在人畜共患蝙蝠冠状病毒的持续自然疫源地,在生态上与菊头蝠相关。