Rocahepevirus ratti [rat hepatitis E virus (HEV)] was originally isolated from rats and found to be non-infectious to nonhuman primates, suggesting humans were not a susceptible host. However, in 2018, rat HEV infections were identified in human patients. High seroprevalence for rat HEV in rats in many countries necessitates studying this emerging zoonotic outbreak. Lack of a human derived rat HEV infectious clone, cell culture systems, and animal models have hindered this effort. In response to the increase in human infection cases by rat HEV, we utilized an infectious clone of the zoonotic rat HEV LCK-3110 strain originally reported from human cases. Capped RNA transcripts of the rat HEV LCK-3110 strain were synthesized, and replication was assessed in both cell culture via transfection and chickens via intrahepatic inoculation. Naive chickens were cohoused together with inoculated chickens. Our results demonstrated that although chickens were susceptible, virus replication was inefficient with only a few of the chickens inoculated with rat HEV having low levels of viremia and fecal virus shedding. However, LCK-3110 HEV was able to transmit between chickens as several naive cohoused chickens became infected as evidenced by viremia, fecal shedding, and the presence of viral protein upon histopathology of the liver. Rat HEV is an emerging zoonotic virus with an ability to spillover across species. Chickens have potential to serve as intermediary hosts, possibly playing a role in rat HEV spread and exposure to humans.
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