No evidence for European bats serving as reservoir for Borna disease virus 1 or other known mammalian orthobornaviruses

Abstract Background The majority of emerging infectious diseases are zoonotic in nature and originate from wildlife reservoirs. Borna disease, caused by Borna disease virus 1 (BoDV-1), is an infectious disease affecting mammals, but recently it has also been shown to cause fatal encephalitis in huma...

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Main Authors: Daniel Nobach, Christiane Herden
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-01-01
Series:Virology Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12985-020-1289-3
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spelling doaj-53f55025cf974403ad3b59a28d24844a2021-01-31T16:14:31ZengBMCVirology Journal1743-422X2020-01-011711610.1186/s12985-020-1289-3No evidence for European bats serving as reservoir for Borna disease virus 1 or other known mammalian orthobornavirusesDaniel Nobach0Christiane Herden1Institute of Veterinary Pathology, Justus Liebig UniversityInstitute of Veterinary Pathology, Justus Liebig UniversityAbstract Background The majority of emerging infectious diseases are zoonotic in nature and originate from wildlife reservoirs. Borna disease, caused by Borna disease virus 1 (BoDV-1), is an infectious disease affecting mammals, but recently it has also been shown to cause fatal encephalitis in humans. The endemic character of Borna disease points towards a nature-bound reservoir, with only one shrew species identified as reservoir host to date. Bats have been identified as reservoirs of a variety of zoonotic infectious agents. Endogenous borna-like elements in the genome of certain bat species additionally point towards co-evolution of bats with bornaviruses and therefore raise the question whether bats could serve as a potential reservoir of orthobornaviruses. Methods Frozen brain samples (n = 257) of bats of seven different genera from Germany were investigated by orthobornaviral RT-PCR. Additionally, tissue slides of formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded material of a subset of these bats (n = 140) were investigated for orthobornaviral phosphoprotein by immunohistochemistry. Results The brain samples were tested by RT-PCR without any evidence of orthobornavirus specific amplicons. Immunohistochemistry revealed a faint immunoreaction in 3/140 bats but with an untypical staining pattern for viral antigen. Conclusions RT-PCR-screening showed no evidence for orthobornaviral RNA in the investigated bats. However, immunohistochemistry results should be investigated further to elucidate whether the reaction might be associated with expressed endogenous bornaviral elements or other so far unknown bornaviruses.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12985-020-1289-3Borna disease virus 1ReservoirBatsBavariaGermanyBornaviridae
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daniel Nobach
Christiane Herden
spellingShingle Daniel Nobach
Christiane Herden
No evidence for European bats serving as reservoir for Borna disease virus 1 or other known mammalian orthobornaviruses
Virology Journal
Borna disease virus 1
Reservoir
Bats
Bavaria
Germany
Bornaviridae
author_facet Daniel Nobach
Christiane Herden
author_sort Daniel Nobach
title No evidence for European bats serving as reservoir for Borna disease virus 1 or other known mammalian orthobornaviruses
title_short No evidence for European bats serving as reservoir for Borna disease virus 1 or other known mammalian orthobornaviruses
title_full No evidence for European bats serving as reservoir for Borna disease virus 1 or other known mammalian orthobornaviruses
title_fullStr No evidence for European bats serving as reservoir for Borna disease virus 1 or other known mammalian orthobornaviruses
title_full_unstemmed No evidence for European bats serving as reservoir for Borna disease virus 1 or other known mammalian orthobornaviruses
title_sort no evidence for european bats serving as reservoir for borna disease virus 1 or other known mammalian orthobornaviruses
publisher BMC
series Virology Journal
issn 1743-422X
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Abstract Background The majority of emerging infectious diseases are zoonotic in nature and originate from wildlife reservoirs. Borna disease, caused by Borna disease virus 1 (BoDV-1), is an infectious disease affecting mammals, but recently it has also been shown to cause fatal encephalitis in humans. The endemic character of Borna disease points towards a nature-bound reservoir, with only one shrew species identified as reservoir host to date. Bats have been identified as reservoirs of a variety of zoonotic infectious agents. Endogenous borna-like elements in the genome of certain bat species additionally point towards co-evolution of bats with bornaviruses and therefore raise the question whether bats could serve as a potential reservoir of orthobornaviruses. Methods Frozen brain samples (n = 257) of bats of seven different genera from Germany were investigated by orthobornaviral RT-PCR. Additionally, tissue slides of formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded material of a subset of these bats (n = 140) were investigated for orthobornaviral phosphoprotein by immunohistochemistry. Results The brain samples were tested by RT-PCR without any evidence of orthobornavirus specific amplicons. Immunohistochemistry revealed a faint immunoreaction in 3/140 bats but with an untypical staining pattern for viral antigen. Conclusions RT-PCR-screening showed no evidence for orthobornaviral RNA in the investigated bats. However, immunohistochemistry results should be investigated further to elucidate whether the reaction might be associated with expressed endogenous bornaviral elements or other so far unknown bornaviruses.
topic Borna disease virus 1
Reservoir
Bats
Bavaria
Germany
Bornaviridae
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12985-020-1289-3
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AT christianeherden noevidenceforeuropeanbatsservingasreservoirforbornadiseasevirus1orotherknownmammalianorthobornaviruses
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