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Hantavirus host assemblages and human disease in the Atlantic Forest

Several viruses from the genus Orthohantavirus are known to cause lethal disease in humans. Sigmodontinae rodents are the main hosts responsible for hantavirus transmission in the tropical forests, savannas, and wetlands of South America. These rodents can shed different hantaviruses, such as the le...

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Autores principales: Muylaert, Renata L., Bovendorp, Ricardo Siqueira, Sabino-Santos, Gilberto, Prist, Paula R., Melo, Geruza Leal, Priante, Camila de Fátima, Wilkinson, David A., Ribeiro, Milton Cezar, Hayman, David T. S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6748440/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31404077
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0007655
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author Muylaert, Renata L.
Bovendorp, Ricardo Siqueira
Sabino-Santos, Gilberto
Prist, Paula R.
Melo, Geruza Leal
Priante, Camila de Fátima
Wilkinson, David A.
Ribeiro, Milton Cezar
Hayman, David T. S.
author_facet Muylaert, Renata L.
Bovendorp, Ricardo Siqueira
Sabino-Santos, Gilberto
Prist, Paula R.
Melo, Geruza Leal
Priante, Camila de Fátima
Wilkinson, David A.
Ribeiro, Milton Cezar
Hayman, David T. S.
author_sort Muylaert, Renata L.
collection PubMed
description Several viruses from the genus Orthohantavirus are known to cause lethal disease in humans. Sigmodontinae rodents are the main hosts responsible for hantavirus transmission in the tropical forests, savannas, and wetlands of South America. These rodents can shed different hantaviruses, such as the lethal and emerging Araraquara orthohantavirus. Factors that drive variation in host populations may influence hantavirus transmission dynamics within and between populations. Landscape structure, and particularly areas with a predominance of agricultural land and forest remnants, is expected to influence the proportion of hantavirus rodent hosts in the Atlantic Forest rodent community. Here, we tested this using 283 Atlantic Forest rodent capture records and geographically weighted models that allow us to test if predictors vary spatially. We also assessed the correspondence between proportions of hantavirus hosts in rodent communities and a human vulnerability to hantavirus infection index across the entire Atlantic Forest biome. We found that hantavirus host proportions were more positively influenced by landscape diversity than by a particular habitat or agricultural matrix type. Local small mammal diversity also positively influenced known pathogenic hantavirus host proportions, indicating that a plasticity to habitat quality may be more important for these hosts than competition with native forest dwelling species. We found a consistent positive effect of sugarcane and tree plantation on the proportion of rodent hosts, whereas defaunation intensity did not correlate with the proportion of hosts of potentially pathogenic hantavirus genotypes in the community, indicating that non-defaunated areas can also be hotspots for hantavirus disease outbreaks. The spatial match between host hotspots and human disease vulnerability was 17%, while coldspots matched 20%. Overall, we discovered strong spatial and land use change influences on hantavirus hosts at the landscape level across the Atlantic Forest. Our findings suggest disease surveillance must be reinforced in the southern and southeastern regions of the biome where the highest predicted hantavirus host proportion and levels of vulnerability spatially match. Importantly, our analyses suggest there may be more complex rodent community dynamics and interactions with human disease than currently hypothesized.
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spelling pubmed-67484402019-09-27 Hantavirus host assemblages and human disease in the Atlantic Forest Muylaert, Renata L. Bovendorp, Ricardo Siqueira Sabino-Santos, Gilberto Prist, Paula R. Melo, Geruza Leal Priante, Camila de Fátima Wilkinson, David A. Ribeiro, Milton Cezar Hayman, David T. S. PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article Several viruses from the genus Orthohantavirus are known to cause lethal disease in humans. Sigmodontinae rodents are the main hosts responsible for hantavirus transmission in the tropical forests, savannas, and wetlands of South America. These rodents can shed different hantaviruses, such as the lethal and emerging Araraquara orthohantavirus. Factors that drive variation in host populations may influence hantavirus transmission dynamics within and between populations. Landscape structure, and particularly areas with a predominance of agricultural land and forest remnants, is expected to influence the proportion of hantavirus rodent hosts in the Atlantic Forest rodent community. Here, we tested this using 283 Atlantic Forest rodent capture records and geographically weighted models that allow us to test if predictors vary spatially. We also assessed the correspondence between proportions of hantavirus hosts in rodent communities and a human vulnerability to hantavirus infection index across the entire Atlantic Forest biome. We found that hantavirus host proportions were more positively influenced by landscape diversity than by a particular habitat or agricultural matrix type. Local small mammal diversity also positively influenced known pathogenic hantavirus host proportions, indicating that a plasticity to habitat quality may be more important for these hosts than competition with native forest dwelling species. We found a consistent positive effect of sugarcane and tree plantation on the proportion of rodent hosts, whereas defaunation intensity did not correlate with the proportion of hosts of potentially pathogenic hantavirus genotypes in the community, indicating that non-defaunated areas can also be hotspots for hantavirus disease outbreaks. The spatial match between host hotspots and human disease vulnerability was 17%, while coldspots matched 20%. Overall, we discovered strong spatial and land use change influences on hantavirus hosts at the landscape level across the Atlantic Forest. Our findings suggest disease surveillance must be reinforced in the southern and southeastern regions of the biome where the highest predicted hantavirus host proportion and levels of vulnerability spatially match. Importantly, our analyses suggest there may be more complex rodent community dynamics and interactions with human disease than currently hypothesized. Public Library of Science 2019-08-12 /pmc/articles/PMC6748440/ /pubmed/31404077 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0007655 Text en © 2019 Muylaert et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Muylaert, Renata L.
Bovendorp, Ricardo Siqueira
Sabino-Santos, Gilberto
Prist, Paula R.
Melo, Geruza Leal
Priante, Camila de Fátima
Wilkinson, David A.
Ribeiro, Milton Cezar
Hayman, David T. S.
Hantavirus host assemblages and human disease in the Atlantic Forest
title Hantavirus host assemblages and human disease in the Atlantic Forest
title_full Hantavirus host assemblages and human disease in the Atlantic Forest
title_fullStr Hantavirus host assemblages and human disease in the Atlantic Forest
title_full_unstemmed Hantavirus host assemblages and human disease in the Atlantic Forest
title_short Hantavirus host assemblages and human disease in the Atlantic Forest
title_sort hantavirus host assemblages and human disease in the atlantic forest
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6748440/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31404077
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0007655
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