Abstract

Rabies is a fatal neurologic disease caused by lyssavirus infection. People are infected through contact with infected animals. The relative increase of human rabies acquired from bats calls for a better understanding of lyssavirus infections in their natural hosts. So far, there is no experimental model that mimics natural lyssavirus infection in the reservoir bat species. Lagos bat virus is a lyssavirus that is endemic in straw-colored fruit bats (Eidolon helvum) in Africa. Here we compared the susceptibility of these bats to three strains of Lagos bat virus (from Senegal, Nigeria, and Ghana) by intracranial inoculation. To allow comparison between strains, we ensured the same titer of virus was inoculated in the same location of the brain of each bat. All bats (n = 3 per strain) were infected, and developed neurological signs, and fatal meningoencephalitis with lyssavirus antigen expression in neurons. There were three main differences among the groups. First, time to death was substantially shorter in the Senegal and Ghana groups (4 to 6 days) than in the Nigeria group (8 days). Second, each virus strain produced a distinct clinical syndrome. Third, the spread of virus to peripheral tissues, tested by hemi-nested reverse transcriptase PCR, was frequent (3 of 3 bats) and widespread (8 to 10 tissues positive of 11 tissues examined) in the Ghana group, was frequent and less widespread in the Senegal group (3/3 bats, 3 to 6 tissues positive), and was rare and restricted in the Nigeria group (1/3 bats, 2 tissues positive). Centrifugal spread of virus from brain to tissue of excretion in the oral cavity is required to enable lyssavirus transmission. Therefore, the Senegal and Ghana strains seem most suitable for further pathogenesis, and for transmission, studies in the straw-colored fruit bat.

Highlights

  • Rabies is an almost invariably fatal disease caused by rabies virus (RABV) or other members of the Lyssavirus genus, in the family of Rhabdoviridae of the order Mononegavirales

  • To better understand the development of human rabies caused by these bat-acquired viruses, we need to study this disease in its bat host under controlled circumstances

  • We compared three available strains of Lagos bat virus for their ability to mimic a natural infection

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Summary

Introduction

Rabies is an almost invariably fatal disease caused by rabies virus (RABV) or other members of the Lyssavirus genus, in the family of Rhabdoviridae of the order Mononegavirales. Singular spill-over events of lyssaviruses other than RABV from bats to terrestrial mammals have been reported [8,9,10,11,12,13]. Despite their increasing importance, we know relatively little about the dynamics of lyssavirus infections in bats [14] and how, for example, pathogenesis might differ from that in carnivores. We know relatively little about the dynamics of lyssavirus infections in bats [14] and how, for example, pathogenesis might differ from that in carnivores This makes it difficult to assess the zoonotic risk of bat lyssavirus infections

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