4.8 Article

Epidemiology and biology of a herpesvirus in rabies endemic vampire bat populations

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-19832-4

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Medical Research Council scholarship via the MRC-CVR PhD programme [MC_UU_12014/12]
  2. Medical Research Council [MC_UU_12014/12, MC_UU_12014/3]
  3. Human Frontier Science Program [RGP0013/2018]
  4. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship
  5. NSF [DEB-1601052]
  6. ARCS Foundation
  7. Explorer's Club
  8. Sir Henry Dale Fellowship - Wellcome Trust [102507/Z/13/Z]
  9. Sir Henry Dale Fellowship - Royal Society [102507/Z/13/Z]
  10. Wellcome Senior Research Fellowship [217221/Z/19/Z]
  11. MRC [MC_UU_12014/12, MC_UU_12014/3] Funding Source: UKRI

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Rabies is a viral zoonosis transmitted by vampire bats across Latin America. Substantial public health and agricultural burdens remain, despite decades of bats culls and livestock vaccinations. Virally vectored vaccines that spread autonomously through bat populations are a theoretically appealing solution to managing rabies in its reservoir host. We investigate the biological and epidemiological suitability of a vampire bat betaherpesvirus (DrBHV) to act as a vaccine vector. In 25 sites across Peru with serological and/or molecular evidence of rabies circulation, DrBHV infects 80-100% of bats, suggesting potential for high population-level vaccine coverage. Phylogenetic analysis reveals host specificity within neotropical bats, limiting risks to non-target species. Finally, deep sequencing illustrates DrBHV super-infections in individual bats, implying that DrBHV-vectored vaccines might invade despite the highly prevalent wild-type virus. These results indicate DrBHV as a promising candidate vector for a transmissible rabies vaccine, and provide a framework to discover and evaluate candidate viral vectors for vaccines against bat-borne zoonoses. Here, Griffiths et al. show infection of 80-100% of sampled vampire bats in Peru with a newly discovered betaherpesvirus (DrBHV) that exhibits specificity within neotropical bats and evidence for superinfection. These data suggest that DrBHV could be a candidate for virally vectored vaccines that spread autonomously through a bat population.

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