Li Hongfeng, Huang Zheng Y X, Lan Jie, Hu Li, Wei Xuemin, Wang Yuhao, Li Xiujun, Li Yang, Becker Daniel J, Wei Fuwen, Xu Yifei
Department of Microbiology, School of Public Health, Cheeloo College of Medicine, Shandong University, Jinan, Shandong, China.
Department of Zoology, School of Life Sciences, Nanjing Forestry University, Nanjing, Jiangsu, China.
Nat Commun. 2025 Jul 21;16(1):6709. doi: 10.1038/s41467-025-61835-6.
The Eulipotyphla (true insectivores) is the third largest mammalian order, comprising over 500 species, and could be an important source of human infectious diseases. However, relatively little is known about the microbial diversity in insectivores and their contribution to virus transmission among wild hosts. In this study, we compile a comprehensive dataset containing over 400,000 records of insectivores and their associated microbes from 1903 to 2023 from multiple public databases. Meta-analyses show that insectivores host 941 unique microbes, 60% of which are viruses; these are predominantly found in shrews and hedgehogs. Human-associated viruses harbored by shrews and hedgehogs are phylogenetically closely related to those in humans, suggesting potential bidirectional transmission between insectivores and humans. Moreover, virus-sharing networks reveal that insectivores hold the second-most central position for virus sharing, second to bats, among all mammalian orders. Insectivores have a high proportion of cross-order transmitted viruses, including many human-associated viruses. Dietary diversity, habitat diversity, and distributional traits emerge as the key ecological factors contributing to cross-species virus transmission. Our findings highlight the microbial diversity in insectivores, indicating this order may serve as potential incubators for viruses capable of infecting mammals and spreading viruses of public health concern.
真盲缺目(真正的食虫动物)是第三大哺乳动物目,包含500多个物种,可能是人类传染病的重要来源。然而,人们对食虫动物的微生物多样性及其在野生宿主间病毒传播中的作用了解相对较少。在本研究中,我们从多个公共数据库汇编了一个综合数据集,其中包含1903年至2023年40多万条食虫动物及其相关微生物的记录。荟萃分析表明,食虫动物携带941种独特的微生物,其中60%是病毒;这些病毒主要存在于鼩鼱和刺猬体内。鼩鼱和刺猬携带的与人类相关的病毒在系统发育上与人类病毒密切相关,这表明食虫动物与人类之间可能存在双向传播。此外,病毒共享网络显示,在所有哺乳动物目中,食虫动物在病毒共享方面占据第二中心的位置,仅次于蝙蝠。食虫动物有很高比例的跨目传播病毒,包括许多与人类相关的病毒。饮食多样性、栖息地多样性和分布特征是导致跨物种病毒传播的关键生态因素。我们的研究结果突出了食虫动物的微生物多样性,表明这个目可能是能够感染哺乳动物的病毒的潜在宿主,并传播具有公共卫生意义的病毒。