Abstract

Lagos bat lyssavirus (LBV) comprising four lineages (A, B, C and D) can potentially cause the fatal disease rabies. Although LBV-B was initially isolated in Nigeria in 1956, there is no information on LBV lineages circulating in Nigeria. This study was undertaken for the first time to measure the neutralizing antibodies against four lineages of LBVs in straw-colored fruit bats (Eidolon helvum) in Makurdi, Nigeria. Serum samples (n = 180) collected during two periods (November 2017–March 2018 and November 2018–March 2019) from terminally bled bats captured for human consumption were tested using a modified fluorescent antibody virus neutralization (mFAVN) assay. A high proportion of bat sera (74%) neutralized at least one lineage of LBV (with reciprocal titers from 9 to >420.89) and most of them neutralized LBV-A (63%), followed by LBV-D (49%), LBV-C (45%) and LBV-B (24%). The majority of positive sera (75%, n = 100) neutralized multiple LBV lineages while the remaining 25% (n = 33) neutralized only a single lineage, i.e., LBV-A (n = 23), LBV-D (n = 8) and LBV-C (n = 2). None exclusively neutralized LBV-B. The results suggest that exposure to LBV is common in E. helvum and that LBV-A (but not LBV-B) is likely to be circulating in this region of Nigeria.

Highlights

  • Lyssaviruses cause rabies, a fatal disease in animals and humans

  • The first Lagos bat lyssavirus was isolated from a strawcolored fruit bat (E. helvum) on Lagos Island (Nigeria) in 1956 [2]

  • This lyssavirus was subsequently classified as a different lyssavirus species from classical rabies virus in 1970 based on results of complement fixation and virus neutralization tests and it was later classified as LBV lineage B (LBV-B) and remains the only LBV isolated from E. helvum in Nigeria so far [3,4,5,6]

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Summary

Introduction

There are 17 recognized lyssavirus species [1]. Lagos bat lyssaviruses (LBVs) have so far been exclusively identified in Africa. The first Lagos bat lyssavirus was isolated from a strawcolored fruit bat (E. helvum) on Lagos Island (Nigeria) in 1956 [2]. This lyssavirus was subsequently classified as a different lyssavirus species from classical rabies virus in 1970 based on results of complement fixation and virus neutralization tests and it was later classified as LBV lineage B (LBV-B) and remains the only LBV isolated from E. helvum in Nigeria so far [3,4,5,6]. Natural and experimental infections and pathogenesis of LBVs have been studied in E. helvum [7,8,9,10]

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