4.6 Article

No Exchange of Picornaviruses in Vietnam between Humans and Animals in a High-Risk Cohort with Close Contact despite High Prevalence and Diversity

Journal

VIRUSES-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v13091709

Keywords

picornavirus; animal-human interface; metagenomic sequencing; rats; bats

Categories

Funding

  1. VIZIONS from the Wellcome Trust [WT/093724]
  2. European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme [874735]

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This study in Vietnam focused on investigating the prevalence, diversity, and potential cross-species transmission of picornaviruses, with novel viruses discovered in bats and rats. However, there was no evidence of zoonotic transmission in the data.
Hospital-based and community-based 'high-risk cohort' studies investigating humans at risk of zoonotic infection due to occupational or residential exposure to animals were conducted in Vietnam, with diverse viruses identified from faecal samples collected from humans, domestic and wild animals. In this study, we focus on the positive-sense RNA virus family Picornaviridae, investigating the prevalence, diversity, and potential for cross-species transmission. Through metagenomic sequencing, we found picornavirus contigs in 23% of samples, belonging to 15 picornavirus genera. Prevalence was highest in bats (67%) while diversity was highest in rats (nine genera). In addition, 22% of the contigs were derived from novel viruses: Twelve phylogenetically distinct clusters were observed in rats of which seven belong to novel species or types in the genera Hunnivirus, Parechovirus, Cardiovirus, Mosavirus and Mupivirus; four distinct clusters were found in bats, belonging to one novel parechovirus species and one related to an unclassified picornavirus. There was no evidence for zoonotic transmission in our data. Our study provides an improved knowledge of the diversity and prevalence of picornaviruses, including a variety of novel picornaviruses in rats and bats. We highlight the importance of monitoring the human-animal interface for possible spill-over events.

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