The Prevalence of Viral Pathogens among Bats in Kazakhstan.
Adilbay I KaragulovTakhmina U ArgimbayevaZamira D OmarovaAli B TulendibayevLaura Zh DushayevaMarina A SvotinaAibarys M MelisbekNurdos A AubakirSabyrkhan M BarmakKulyaisan T SultankulovaDana A AlibekovaTanat T YermekbaiAskar M NametovDmitry A LozovoyKhairulla B AbeuovMukhit B OrynbayevPublished in: Viruses (2022)
Bats carry thousands of viruses from 28 different families. To determine the presence of various pathogens in bat populations in Kazakhstan, 1149 samples (393 oropharyngeal swabs, 349 brain samples, 407 guano) were collected. The samples were collected from four species of bats ( Vespertilio murinus , Nyctalus noctula , Myotis blythii , Eptesicus serotinus ) in nine regions. The Coronavirus RNA was found in 38 (4.75%) samples, and the rabies virus in 27 (7.74%) samples from bats. Coronaviruses and the rabies virus were found in bats in six out of nine studied areas. The RNAs of SARS-CoV-2, MERS, TBE, CCHF, WNF, influenza A viruses were not detected in the bat samples. The phylogeny of the RdRp gene of 12 samples made it possible to classify them as alphacoronaviruses and divide them into two groups. The main group ( n = 11) was closely related to bat coronaviruses from Ghana, Zimbabwe and Kenya. The second group ( n = 1) was closely related to viruses previously isolated in the south of Kazakhstan. The phylogeny of the N gene sequence from a bat from west Kazakhstan revealed its close relationship with isolates from the Cosmopolitan group of rabies viruses (Central Asia). These results highlight the need for a continuous monitoring of volatile populations to improve the surveillance and detection of infectious diseases.
Keyphrases
- sars cov
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus
- infectious diseases
- genetic diversity
- public health
- copy number
- genome wide
- gram negative
- white matter
- gene expression
- risk factors
- functional connectivity
- hepatitis c virus
- single cell
- blood brain barrier
- high resolution
- mass spectrometry
- hiv infected
- human immunodeficiency virus
- resting state
- sensitive detection
- label free
- hiv testing
- genome wide identification