4.4 Article

Faecal virome of the Australian grey-headed flying fox from urban/suburban environments contains novel coronaviruses, retroviruses and sapoviruses

Journal

VIROLOGY
Volume 576, Issue -, Pages 42-51

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.virol.2022.09.002

Keywords

Coronavirus; Sapovirus; Retrovirus; Faecal; Mammalian; Grey -headed flying fox

Categories

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council Australian Laureate Fellowship
  2. Sydney Institute for Infectious Diseases
  3. [FL170100022]
  4. Australian Research Council [FL170100022] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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This study characterized the virome of greyheaded flying foxes in Australia using metatranscriptomic sequencing and identified novel viruses, including a bat betacoronavirus and a bat sapovirus, which were the first of their kind found in Australian bats.
Bats are important reservoirs for viruses of public health and veterinary concern. Virus studies in Australian bats usually target the families Paramyxoviridae, Coronaviridae and Rhabdoviridae, with little known about their overall virome composition. We used metatranscriptomic sequencing to characterise the faecal virome of greyheaded flying foxes from three colonies in urban/suburban locations from two Australian states. We identified viruses from three mammalian-infecting (Coronaviridae, Caliciviridae, Retroviridae) and one possible mammalianinfecting (Birnaviridae) family. Of particular interest were a novel bat betacoronavirus (subgenus Nobecovirus) and a novel bat sapovirus (Caliciviridae), the first identified in Australian bats, as well as a potentially exogenous retrovirus. The novel betacoronavirus was detected in two sampling locations 1375 km apart and falls in a viral lineage likely with a long association with bats. This study highlights the utility of unbiased sequencing of faecal samples for identifying novel viruses and revealing broad-scale patterns of virus ecology and evolution.

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