High genetic diversity of alphacoronaviruses in bat species (Mammalia: Chiroptera) from the Atlantic Forest in Brazil.
Larissa Mayumi BuenoHelena Lage FerreiraAmanda de Oliveira VianaLaura Morais Nascimento SilvaMaria Vitória Dos Santos de MoraesJulia Cristina BenassiGuilherme Pereira ScagionErick Gustavo DorlassBruna Larotonda Telezynski LopesIrineu Noberto CunhaRamiro MelinskiIgor Ferreira de AlvarengaGabriel Lins LeitãoRoberta Costa RodriguesIolanda Maria da Silva PereiraLilia D'ark Nunes Dos SantosFabiane FischAlana Drielle RochaDagoberto PortGabriela Stahelin PereiraAlessandra GreattiAna Caroline de Souza BarnabéJunko TsukamotoErika Hingst-ZaherSeverino Mendes de AzevedoWallace Rodrigues TelinoJoaquim Olinto BrancoTatiana OmettoJansen AraujoClarice Weis ArnsHelena Lage FerreiraEdison Luiz DurigonPublished in: Transboundary and emerging diseases (2022)
Bat coronaviruses (Bat-CoVs) represent around 35% of all virus genomes described in bats. Brazil has one of the highest mammal species diversity, with 181 species of bats described so far. However, few Bat-CoV surveillance programmes were carried out in the country. Thus, our aim was to jevaluate the Bat-CoV diversity in the Atlantic Forest, the second biome with the highest number of bat species in Brazil. We analysed 456 oral and rectal swabs and 22 tissue samples from Atlantic Forest bats, detecting Alphacoronavirus in 44 swab samples (9.6%) targeting the RdRp gene from seven different bat species, three of which have never been described as Bat-CoV hosts. Phylogenetic analysis of the amino acid (aa) sequences coding the RdRp gene grouped the sequences obtained in our study with Bat-CoV previously detected in identical or congeneric bat species, belonging to four subgenera, with high aa identity (over 90%). The RdRp gene was also detected in three tissue samples from Diphylla ecaudata and Sturnira lilium, and the partial S gene was successfully sequenced in five tissues and swab samples of D. ecaudata. The phylogenetic analysis based on the partial S gene obtained here grouped the sequence of D. ecaudata with CoV from Desmodus rotundus previously detected in Peru and Brazil, belonging to the Amalacovirus subgenus, with aa identity ranging from 73.6% to 88.8%. Our data reinforce the wide distribution of Coronaviruses in bats from Brazil and the novelty of three bats species as Bat-CoV hosts and the co-circulation of four Alphacoronavirus subgenera in Brazil.