Ndong Mebaley Telstar G, Becquart Pierre, Fritz Matthieu, Elguero Eric, Mombo Illich M, Garcia Déborah C, Bohou Kombila Linda, Lenguiya Léadisaelle H, Boundenga Larson, Leroy Eric M, Maganga Gael D
Département de Virologie, Centre Interdisciplinaire de Recherches Médicales de Franceville (CIRMF), Franceville, Gabon.
Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD), Maladies Infectieuses et Vecteurs: Ecologie, Génétique, Evolution et Contrôle (MIVEGEC), Montpellier, France.
PLoS One. 2025 Mar 5;20(3):e0314801. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0314801. eCollection 2025.
The Ebola virus (EBOV) and Marburg virus (MARV) have been in circulation in Africa for several decades and are the cause of numerous outbreaks. There has been very little research on the role of domestic animals in their transmission to humans, but studies have only been conducted in dogs and pigs where relatively high levels of IgG was detected. These levels suggest that ruminants, which have not been studied, should also be investigated. This study aims at evaluating the circulation of MARV and EBOV in dogs, sheep and goats and to assess their exposure to these two viruses. Between November 2018 and March 2023, a total of 448 domestic animal sera or plasma samples, including 128 dogs, 222 goats and 98 sheep, were analyzed by serological and molecular methods. The Luminex technique was employed for the detection of IgG antibodies against EBOV NP, GP, MARV GP and VP40, while EBOV specific and pan-filovirus polymerase chain reaction amplification was used for molecular analysis. All samples tested negative for EBOV and MARV RNA. However, our results showed that 2/128 (1.5%) dogs, 1/222 (0.4%) goats and 3/98 (3.1%) sheep displayed NP and GP anti-EBOV antibodies. In addition, 2/128 (1.5%) dogs displayed GP and VP40 anti-MARV antibodies, while no antibodies were detected in goats and sheep. Over all, these results suggest that dogs and small ruminants are naturally exposed to EBOV and MARV. In the absence of clinically sick individuals, the presence of IgG-positive animals suggests various sources of exposure, such as contaminated fruits with the urine and saliva of bats or dead bats fallen on the ground ate by dogs. These contaminated substrates are both consumed by both dogs and small ruminants. The findings provide new insights into the circulation and exposure of EBOV and MARV in domestic animals, emphasising their potential use as sentinels. Furthermore, they prompt significant considerations regarding the potential risk to humans in this region.
埃博拉病毒(EBOV)和马尔堡病毒(MARV)已在非洲传播数十年,是多次疫情爆发的起因。关于家畜在病毒传播给人类过程中所起作用的研究非常少,不过仅在狗和猪身上开展过相关研究,且检测到相对较高水平的IgG。这些水平表明,尚未开展研究的反刍动物也应进行调查。本研究旨在评估马尔堡病毒和埃博拉病毒在狗、绵羊和山羊中的传播情况,并评估它们接触这两种病毒的情况。在2018年11月至2023年3月期间,共通过血清学和分子方法分析了448份家畜血清或血浆样本,包括128只狗、222只山羊和98只绵羊。采用Luminex技术检测针对埃博拉病毒核蛋白(NP)、糖蛋白(GP)、马尔堡病毒糖蛋白(GP)和病毒蛋白40(VP40)的IgG抗体,同时使用埃博拉病毒特异性和泛丝状病毒聚合酶链反应扩增进行分子分析。所有样本的埃博拉病毒和马尔堡病毒RNA检测均为阴性。然而,我们的结果显示,2/128(1.5%)的狗、1/222(0.4%)的山羊和3/98(3.1%)的绵羊呈现出NP和GP抗埃博拉病毒抗体。此外,2/128(1.5%)的狗呈现出GP和VP40抗马尔堡病毒抗体,而在山羊和绵羊中未检测到抗体。总体而言,这些结果表明狗和小型反刍动物自然接触到了埃博拉病毒和马尔堡病毒。在没有临床患病个体的情况下,IgG阳性动物的存在表明存在各种接触源,例如被蝙蝠尿液和唾液污染的水果,或者狗吃掉落在地上的死蝙蝠。这些受污染的底物会被狗和小型反刍动物食用。这些发现为埃博拉病毒和马尔堡病毒在家畜中的传播和接触情况提供了新的见解,强调了它们作为哨兵的潜在用途。此外,这些发现促使人们对该地区人类面临的潜在风险进行重大思考。