Litcius/Paper detail

Isolation of infectious Lloviu virus from Schreiber’s bats in Hungary

Gábor Kemenesi, Gábor Endre Tóth, Martin Mayora Neto, Simon D. Scott, Nigel Temperton, Edward Wright, Elke Mühlberger, Adam J. Hume, Ellen L. Suder, Brigitta Zana, Sándor Boldogh, Tamás Görföl, Péter Estók, Tamara Szentiványi, Zsófia Lanszki, B Somogyi, Ágnes Nagy, Csaba István Pereszlényi, Gábor Dudás, Fanni Földes, Kornélia Kurucz, Mónika Madai, Safia Zeghbib, Piet Maes, Bert Vanmechelen, Ferenc Jakab

2022Nature Communications75 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Some filoviruses can be transmitted to humans by zoonotic spillover events from their natural host and filovirus outbreaks have occured with increasing frequency in the last years. The filovirus Lloviu virus (LLOV), was identified in 2002 in Schreiber's bats (Miniopterus schreibersii) in Spain and was subsequently detected in bats in Hungary. Here we isolate infectious LLOV from the blood of a live sampled Schreiber's bat in Hungary. The isolate is subsequently sequenced and cultured in the Miniopterus sp. kidney cell line SuBK12-08. It is furthermore able to infect monkey and human cells, suggesting that LLOV might have spillover potential. A multi-year surveillance of LLOV in bats in Hungary detects LLOV RNA in both deceased and live animals as well as in coupled ectoparasites from the families Nycteribiidae and Ixodidae. This correlates with LLOV seropositivity in sampled Schreiber's bats. Our data support the role of bats, specifically Miniopterus schreibersii as hosts for LLOV in Europe. We suggest that bat-associated parasites might play a role in the natural ecology of filoviruses in temperate climate regions compared to filoviruses in the tropics.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyOutbreakVirologyZoologyEbolavirusEbola virusViral Infections and Outbreaks ResearchViral Infections and VectorsViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiology
Isolation of infectious Lloviu virus from Schreiber’s bats in Hungary | Litcius