10 research outputs found

    Two Novel Parvoviruses in Frugivorous New and Old World Bats

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    Bats, a globally distributed group of mammals with high ecological importance, are increasingly recognized as natural reservoir hosts for viral agents of significance to human and animal health. In the present study, we evaluated pools of blood samples obtained from two phylogenetically distant bat families, in particular from flying foxes (Pteropodidae), Eidolon helvum in West Africa, and from two species of New World leaf-nosed fruit bats (Phyllostomidae), Artibeus jamaicensis and Artibeus lituratus in Central America. A sequence-independent virus discovery technique (VIDISCA) was used in combination with high throughput sequencing to detect two novel parvoviruses: a PARV4-like virus named Eh-BtPV-1 in Eidolon helvum from Ghana and the first member of a putative new genus in Artibeus jamaicensis from Panama (Aj-BtPV-1). Those viruses were circulating in the corresponding bat colony at rates of 7–8%. Aj-BtPV-1 was also found in Artibeus lituratus (5.5%). Both viruses were detected in the blood of infected animals at high concentrations: up to 10E8 and to 10E10 copies/ml for Aj-BtPV-1 and Eh-BtPV-1 respectively. Eh-BtPV-1 was additionally detected in all organs collected from bats (brain, lungs, liver, spleen, kidneys and intestine) and spleen and kidneys were identified as the most likely sites where viral replication takes place. Our study shows that bat parvoviruses share common ancestors with known parvoviruses of humans and livestock. We also provide evidence that a variety of Parvovirinae are able to cause active infection in bats and that they are widely distributed in these animals with different geographic origin, ecologies and climatic ranges

    Drug Resistance Spread in 6 Metropolitan Regions, Germany, 2001-2018

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    We analyzed 1,397 HIV-1 pol sequences of antiretroviral therapy-naive patients in a total of 7 university hospitals in Bonn, Cologne, Frankfurt, Hamburg, Hannover, and Munich, Germany. Phylogenetic and network analysis elucidated numerous cases of shared drug resistance mutations among genetically linked patients; K103N was the most frequently shared mutation

    Detection of Eh-BtPV-1 in different body compartments of 7 <i>Eidolon helvum</i> bats.<sup>a</sup>

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    a<p>Viral concentrations are indicated as copies/ml in serum and copies/g of tissue obtained from different organs; NEG = negative; NA = not available. The boldface viral concentrations indicate organs with a concentration at least 10 fold higher than serum.</p

    Identity ranges (%) of the 3 ORFs both at amino acid (bold) and nucleotide level between species in the PARV4-like viruses<sup>a</sup>.

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    a<p>Eh-BtPV-1 (<i>Eidolon helvum Bat Parvovirus</i> 1), PARV4-g1/3 (<i>Human Parvovirus 4</i> genotypes 1, NC_007018, 2, DQ873391, 3, EU874248), ChimpPTV (<i>Chimpanzee PARV4</i>, HQ113143), PHoV (<i>Porcine Hokovirus</i>, EU200673), BHoV (<i>Bovine Hokovirus</i>, EU200670).</p

    Three types of Aj-BtPV-1.

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    <p>The phylogenetic tree was based on a 740 nt fragment (nucleotides 3820–4561) of Aj-BtPV identified in <i>Artibeus jamaicensis</i> and <i>Artibeus lituratus</i> (#174) bats from Panama, showing the 3 different viral types (panel A). Identity values (in percentage) within and between the 3 types are shown in panel B.</p

    Genome organization of Eh-BtPV-1 and of representative members of the PARV4-like genus.

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    <p>Indicated are the main ORFs (gray, coding frame indicated in parenthesis) and the PLA<sub>2</sub> motif position (purple). On the top the identity within the alignment is shown. Accession numbers: PHoV, EU200673; BHoV, EU200670; ChimpPTV, HQ113143; PARV4, AY622943. Figure was made with Geneious v5.1 software <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0029140#pone.0029140-Drummond1" target="_blank">[52]</a>.</p

    Epidemiological and clinical insights into the enterovirus D68 upsurge in Europe 2021/22 and the emergence of novel B3-derived lineages, ENPEN multicentre study

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    International audienceEnterovirus D68 (EV-D68) infections are associated with severe respiratory disease and acute flaccid myelitis (AFM). The European Non-Polio Enterovirus Network (ENPEN) aimed to investigate the epidemiological and genetic characteristics of EV-D68 and its clinical impact during the fall-winter season of 2021/22. From 19 European countries, 58 institutes reported 10,481 (6.8%) EV-positive samples of which 1,004 (9.6%) were identified as EV-D68 (852 respiratory samples). Clinical data was reported for 969 cases. 78.9% of infections were reported in children (0-5 years); 37.9% of cases were hospitalised. Acute respiratory distress was commonly noted (93.1%) followed by fever (49.4%). Neurological problems were observed in 6.4% of cases with six reported with AFM. Phylodynamic/Nextstrain and phylogenetic analyses based on 694 sequences showed the emergence of two novel B3-derived lineages, with no regional clustering. In conclusion, we describe a large-scale EV-D68 European upsurge with severe clinical impact and the emergence of B3-derived lineages
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