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Spillover of West Caucasian Bat Lyssavirus (WCBV) in a Domestic Cat and Westward Expansion in the Palearctic Region

In June 2020, a cat from Arezzo (Italy) that died from a neurological disease was diagnosed with West Caucasian Bat Lyssavirus (WCBV). The virus retained high identity across the whole-genome with the reference isolate found in 2002 from a Russian bent-winged bat. We applied control measures recomme...

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Autores principales: Leopardi, Stefania, Barneschi, Ettore, Manna, Giuseppe, Zecchin, Barbara, Priori, Pamela, Drzewnioková, Petra, Festa, Francesca, Lombardo, Andrea, Parca, Fabio, Scaravelli, Dino, Maroni Ponti, Andrea, De Benedictis, Paola
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8540014/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34696493
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v13102064
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author Leopardi, Stefania
Barneschi, Ettore
Manna, Giuseppe
Zecchin, Barbara
Priori, Pamela
Drzewnioková, Petra
Festa, Francesca
Lombardo, Andrea
Parca, Fabio
Scaravelli, Dino
Maroni Ponti, Andrea
De Benedictis, Paola
author_facet Leopardi, Stefania
Barneschi, Ettore
Manna, Giuseppe
Zecchin, Barbara
Priori, Pamela
Drzewnioková, Petra
Festa, Francesca
Lombardo, Andrea
Parca, Fabio
Scaravelli, Dino
Maroni Ponti, Andrea
De Benedictis, Paola
author_sort Leopardi, Stefania
collection PubMed
description In June 2020, a cat from Arezzo (Italy) that died from a neurological disease was diagnosed with West Caucasian Bat Lyssavirus (WCBV). The virus retained high identity across the whole-genome with the reference isolate found in 2002 from a Russian bent-winged bat. We applied control measures recommended by national regulations, investigated a possible interface between cats and bats using visual inspections, bioacoustics analyses and camera trapping and performed active and passive surveillance in bats to trace the source of infection. People that were exposed to the cat received full post-exposure prophylaxis while animals underwent six months of quarantine. One year later, they are all healthy. In a tunnel located near the cat’s house, we identified a group of bent-winged bats that showed virus-neutralizing antibodies to WCBV across four sampling occasions, but no virus in salivary swabs. Carcasses from other bat species were all negative. This description of WCBV in a non-flying mammal confirms that this virus can cause clinical rabies in the absence of preventive and therapeutic measures, and highlights the lack of international guidelines against divergent lyssaviruses. We detected bent-winged bats as the most probable source of infection, testifying the encroachment between these bats and pets/human in urban areas and confirming free-ranging cats as potential hazard for public health and conservation.
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spelling pubmed-85400142021-10-24 Spillover of West Caucasian Bat Lyssavirus (WCBV) in a Domestic Cat and Westward Expansion in the Palearctic Region Leopardi, Stefania Barneschi, Ettore Manna, Giuseppe Zecchin, Barbara Priori, Pamela Drzewnioková, Petra Festa, Francesca Lombardo, Andrea Parca, Fabio Scaravelli, Dino Maroni Ponti, Andrea De Benedictis, Paola Viruses Article In June 2020, a cat from Arezzo (Italy) that died from a neurological disease was diagnosed with West Caucasian Bat Lyssavirus (WCBV). The virus retained high identity across the whole-genome with the reference isolate found in 2002 from a Russian bent-winged bat. We applied control measures recommended by national regulations, investigated a possible interface between cats and bats using visual inspections, bioacoustics analyses and camera trapping and performed active and passive surveillance in bats to trace the source of infection. People that were exposed to the cat received full post-exposure prophylaxis while animals underwent six months of quarantine. One year later, they are all healthy. In a tunnel located near the cat’s house, we identified a group of bent-winged bats that showed virus-neutralizing antibodies to WCBV across four sampling occasions, but no virus in salivary swabs. Carcasses from other bat species were all negative. This description of WCBV in a non-flying mammal confirms that this virus can cause clinical rabies in the absence of preventive and therapeutic measures, and highlights the lack of international guidelines against divergent lyssaviruses. We detected bent-winged bats as the most probable source of infection, testifying the encroachment between these bats and pets/human in urban areas and confirming free-ranging cats as potential hazard for public health and conservation. MDPI 2021-10-14 /pmc/articles/PMC8540014/ /pubmed/34696493 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v13102064 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Leopardi, Stefania
Barneschi, Ettore
Manna, Giuseppe
Zecchin, Barbara
Priori, Pamela
Drzewnioková, Petra
Festa, Francesca
Lombardo, Andrea
Parca, Fabio
Scaravelli, Dino
Maroni Ponti, Andrea
De Benedictis, Paola
Spillover of West Caucasian Bat Lyssavirus (WCBV) in a Domestic Cat and Westward Expansion in the Palearctic Region
title Spillover of West Caucasian Bat Lyssavirus (WCBV) in a Domestic Cat and Westward Expansion in the Palearctic Region
title_full Spillover of West Caucasian Bat Lyssavirus (WCBV) in a Domestic Cat and Westward Expansion in the Palearctic Region
title_fullStr Spillover of West Caucasian Bat Lyssavirus (WCBV) in a Domestic Cat and Westward Expansion in the Palearctic Region
title_full_unstemmed Spillover of West Caucasian Bat Lyssavirus (WCBV) in a Domestic Cat and Westward Expansion in the Palearctic Region
title_short Spillover of West Caucasian Bat Lyssavirus (WCBV) in a Domestic Cat and Westward Expansion in the Palearctic Region
title_sort spillover of west caucasian bat lyssavirus (wcbv) in a domestic cat and westward expansion in the palearctic region
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8540014/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34696493
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v13102064
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