Litcius/Paper detail

Selective replication and vertical transmission of Ebola virus in experimentally infected Angolan free-tailed bats

Silke A. Riesle‐Sbarbaro, Gudrun Wibbelt, Ariane Düx, V. Kouakou, Marcel Bokelmann, Katharina Hansen-Kant, Norman Kirchoff, Michael Laue, Nicole Kromarek, Angelika Lander, Ulrich Vogel, Annette Wahlbrink, David M. Wozniak, Dana Scott, Joseph Prescott, Lars Schaade, Emmanuel Couacy‐Hymann, Andreas Kurth

2024Nature Communications24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The natural reservoir of Ebola virus (EBOV), agent of a zoonosis burdening several African countries, remains unidentified, albeit evidence points towards bats. In contrast, the ecology of the related Marburg virus is much better understood; with experimental infections of bats being instrumental for understanding reservoir-pathogen interactions. Experiments have focused on elucidating reservoir competence, infection kinetics and specifically horizontal transmission, although, vertical transmission plays a key role in many viral enzootic cycles. Herein, we investigate the permissiveness of Angolan free-tailed bats (AFBs), known to harbour Bombali virus, to other filoviruses: Ebola, Marburg, Taï Forest and Reston viruses. We demonstrate that only the bats inoculated with EBOV show high and disseminated viral replication and infectious virus shedding, without clinical disease, while the other filoviruses fail to establish productive infections. Notably, we evidence placental-specific tissue tropism and a unique ability of EBOV to traverse the placenta, infect and persist in foetal tissues of AFBs, which results in distinct genetic signatures of adaptive evolution. These findings not only demonstrate plausible routes of horizontal and vertical transmission in these bats, which are expectant of reservoir hosts, but may also reveal an ancillary transmission mechanism, potentially required for the maintenance of EBOV in small reservoir populations.

Topics & Concepts

Ebola virusVirologyBiologyEnzooticTransmission (telecommunications)Disease reservoirEbolavirusVirusViral replicationZoonosisNatural reservoirTropismEngineeringElectrical engineeringViral Infections and Outbreaks ResearchViral Infections and VectorsZoonotic diseases and public health