Ortiz-Baez Ayda Susana, Rose Karrie, Lang Bethan J, Hall Jane, Holmes Edward C
School of Medical Sciences, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales 2006, Australia.
Australian Registry of Wildlife Health, Taronga Conservation Society Australia, Mosman, New South Wales 2088, Australia.
One Health. 2025 May 3;20:101060. doi: 10.1016/j.onehlt.2025.101060. eCollection 2025 Jun.
Bats are commonly thought to harbour a high diversity and abundance of RNA viruses, some of which are able to jump species boundaries to emerge in new hosts. However, gaps remain in our understanding of the ecological factors that shape the bat virome and influence the diversity, circulation and population persistence of viral infections. Flying foxes (Pteropodidae) are representative of the chiropteran fauna in Australia, holding significant ecological, cultural, and social importance. However, some species have also been linked to the circulation of mammalian pathogens such as Hendra virus and Australian bat lyssavirus. Here, we characterised the RNA virome of the Christmas Island flying fox (), a native and endangered species only found on the remote Australian territory of Christmas Island. Through metatranscriptomic sequencing of 46 samples, including faeces, blood, urine and tissue lesions, we found that these bats exhibit limited RNA virus diversity dominated by dietary viruses. The paucity of RNA viruses likely reflects their small population size (between 1500 and 2600 individuals) and geographic isolation from other bat and mammalian species, except for pests and humans. However, we identified a novel alphacoronavirus in urine, related to viruses circulating in microbats in mainland Australia, and a picorna-like virus related to picornaviruses found in invertebrates. Although this novel picorna-like virus may be of a dietary origin, these flying foxes predominantly eat nectar, pollen and fruit, and viral RNA was also present in blood, urine and wing lesion samples. Overall, these data reveal how ecological factors have a profound impact on RNA virome diversity, highlighting risks to bat conservation, and showing that bats are not always major reservoirs for zoonotic viruses.
蝙蝠通常被认为携带种类繁多且数量丰富的RNA病毒,其中一些病毒能够跨越物种界限,在新宿主中出现。然而,我们对塑造蝙蝠病毒组并影响病毒感染的多样性、传播和种群持久性的生态因素的理解仍存在空白。狐蝠(狐蝠科)是澳大利亚翼手目动物的代表,具有重要的生态、文化和社会意义。然而,一些物种也与亨德拉病毒和澳大利亚蝙蝠狂犬病毒等哺乳动物病原体的传播有关。在这里,我们对圣诞岛狐蝠()的RNA病毒组进行了特征分析,这是一种仅在澳大利亚偏远领地圣诞岛发现的本土濒危物种。通过对46个样本(包括粪便、血液、尿液和组织病变样本)进行宏转录组测序,我们发现这些蝙蝠的RNA病毒多样性有限,主要由饮食来源的病毒主导。RNA病毒数量稀少可能反映了它们的种群规模较小(1500至2600只个体之间),以及除了害虫和人类之外,与其他蝙蝠和哺乳动物物种在地理上的隔离。然而,我们在尿液中鉴定出一种新型甲型冠状病毒,它与澳大利亚大陆小型蝙蝠中传播的病毒有关,还鉴定出一种与在无脊椎动物中发现的小RNA病毒相关的类小RNA病毒。尽管这种新型类小RNA病毒可能源于饮食,但这些狐蝠主要食用花蜜、花粉和水果,病毒RNA也存在于血液、尿液和翅膀病变样本中。总体而言,这些数据揭示了生态因素如何对RNA病毒组多样性产生深远影响,突出了蝙蝠保护面临的风险,并表明蝙蝠并不总是人畜共患病毒的主要宿主。