Litcius/Paper detail

Bats host the most virulent—but not the most dangerous—zoonotic viruses

Sarah Guth, Nardus Mollentze, Katia Renault, Daniel G. Streicker, Elisa Visher, Mike Boots, Cara E. Brook

2022Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences60 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

SignificanceThe clear need to mitigate zoonotic risk has fueled increased viral discovery in specific reservoir host taxa. We show that a combination of viral and reservoir traits can predict zoonotic virus virulence and transmissibility in humans, supporting the hypothesis that bats harbor exceptionally virulent zoonoses. However, pandemic prevention requires thinking beyond zoonotic capacity, virulence, and transmissibility to consider collective "burden" on human health. For this, viral discovery targeting specific reservoirs may be inefficient as death burden correlates with viral, not reservoir, traits, and depends on context-specific epidemiological dynamics across and beyond the human-animal interface. These findings suggest that longitudinal studies of viral dynamics in reservoir and spillover host populations may offer the most effective strategy for mitigating zoonotic risk.

Topics & Concepts

VirulenceBiologyContext (archaeology)Host (biology)PandemicZoonosisVirologyZoonotic diseaseNatural reservoirTransmissibility (structural dynamics)Disease reservoirVirusEcologyInfectious disease (medical specialty)Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)DiseaseMedicineGeneticsVibration isolationGeneVibrationPaleontologyQuantum mechanicsPathologyPhysicsZoonotic diseases and public healthViral Infections and VectorsViral Infections and Outbreaks Research