Seasonal host and ecological drivers may promote restricted water as a viral vector
Autor: | Walid Azab, Sanatana E. Soilemetzidou, Marion L. East, Jörg Melzheimer, Alex D. Greenwood, Anisha Dayaram, Mathias Franz, Peter A. Seeber, Kyriakos Tsangaras, Nikolaus Osterrieder, Oyunsaikhan Ganbaatar, Gayle K. McEwen, Christian Walzer, Alexandre Courtiol, Petra Kaczensky |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Environmental Engineering
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences Viral transmission 010501 environmental sciences Biology 01 natural sciences law.invention Viral vector law Dry season Viral emergence Environmental Chemistry Equine herpesviruses Animals Waste Management and Disposal Herpesviridae Phylogeny 0105 earth and related environmental sciences Abiotic component Infectivity Phylogenetic tree Ecology Host (biology) Water Herpesviridae Infections Pollution Transmission (mechanics) Seasons Surface water |
Zdroj: | Science of the Total Environment |
ISSN: | 1879-1026 |
Popis: | In climates with seasonally limited precipitation, terrestrial animals congregate at high densities at scarce water sources. We hypothesize that viruses can exploit the recurrence of these diverse animal congrega- tions to spread. In this study, we test the central prediction of this hypothesis — that viruses employing this transmission strategy remain stable and infectious in water. Equid herpesviruses (EHVs) were cho- sen as a model as they have been shown to remain stable and infectious in water for weeks under labo- ratory conditions. Using fecal data from wild equids from a previous study, we establish that EHVs are shed more frequently by their hosts during the dry season, increasing the probability of water source contamination with EHV. We document the presence of several strains of EHVs present in high genome copy number from the surface water and sediments of waterholes sampled across a variety of mamma- lian assemblages, locations, temperatures and pH. Phylogenetic analysis reveals that the different EHV strains found exhibit little divergence despite representing ancient lineages. We employed molecular approaches to show that EHVs shed remain stable in waterholes with detection decreasing with increas- ing temperature in sediments. Infectivity experiments using cell culture reveals that EHVs remain infectious in water derived from waterholes. The results are supportive of water as an abiotic viral vector for EHV |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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