Đakrông virus, a novel mobatvirus (Hantaviridae) harbored by the Stoliczka’s Asian trident bat (Aselliscus stoliczkanus) in Vietnam

The recent discovery of genetically distinct shrew- and mole-borne viruses belonging to the newly defined family Hantaviridae (order Bunyavirales) has spurred an extended search for hantaviruses in RNAlater®-preserved lung tissues from 215 bats (order Chiroptera) representing five families (Hipposid...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scientific reports 2019-07, Vol.9 (1), p.10239-10239, Article 10239
Hauptverfasser: Arai, Satoru, Aoki, Keita, Sơn, Nguyễn Trường, Tú, Vương Tân, Kikuchi, Fuka, Kinoshita, Gohta, Fukui, Dai, Thành, Hoàng Trung, Gu, Se Hun, Yoshikawa, Yasuhiro, Tanaka-Taya, Keiko, Morikawa, Shigeru, Yanagihara, Richard, Oishi, Kazunori
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The recent discovery of genetically distinct shrew- and mole-borne viruses belonging to the newly defined family Hantaviridae (order Bunyavirales) has spurred an extended search for hantaviruses in RNAlater®-preserved lung tissues from 215 bats (order Chiroptera) representing five families (Hipposideridae, Megadermatidae, Pteropodidae, Rhinolophidae and Vespertilionidae), collected in Vietnam during 2012 to 2014. A newly identified hantavirus, designated Đakrông virus (DKGV), was detected in one of two Stoliczka’s Asian trident bats ( Aselliscus stoliczkanus ), from Đakrông Nature Reserve in Quảng Trị Province. Using maximum-likelihood and Bayesian methods, phylogenetic trees based on the full-length S, M and L segments showed that DKGV occupied a basal position with other mobatviruses, suggesting that primordial hantaviruses may have been hosted by ancestral bats.
ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/s41598-019-46697-5