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. 2018 Jun 20;15(1):104.
doi: 10.1186/s12985-018-1011-x.

Bat Astrovirus in Mozambique

Affiliations

Bat Astrovirus in Mozambique

Flora Hoarau et al. Virol J. .

Abstract

Astroviruses (AstVs) are responsible for infection of a large diversity of mammalian and avian species, including bats, aquatic birds, livestock and humans. We investigated AstVs circulation in bats in Mozambique and Mayotte, a small island in the Comoros Archipelago located between east Africa and Madagascar. Biological material was collected from 338 bats and tested for the presence of the AstV RNA-dependent RNA-polymerase gene with a pan-AstV semi-nested polymerase chain reaction assay. None of the 79 samples obtained from Mayotte bats (Pteropus seychellensis comorensis and Chaerephon pusillus) tested positive; however, 20.1% of bats sampled in Mozambique shed AstVs at the time of sampling and significant interspecific variation in the proportion of positive bats was detected. Many AstVs sequences obtained from a given bat species clustered in different phylogenetic lineages, while others seem to reflect some level of host-virus association, but also with AstVs previously reported from Malagasy bats. Our findings support active circulation of a large diversity of AstVs in bats in the western Indian Ocean islands, including the southeastern African coast, and highlight the need for more detailed assessment of its risk of zoonotic transmission to human populations.

Keywords: Madagascar; Mammastrovirus; Mayotte; Mozambique; Triaenops afer.

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Conflict of interest statement

Ethics approval

All procedures have been evaluated and approved by an ethic committee (Agreement number A974 001; Comité d’éthique du CYROI number 114; Cyclotron Reunion Océan Indien, Sainte Clotilde, Reunion Island), and authorized by the French Ministry of Education and Research (Reference numbers 03584.01 and APAFIS#2638-2015110616208322v1). On Mayotte, research permits were issued by the ‘Direction de l’Environnement, de l’Aménagement et du Logement’ (Arreté n°158/DEAL/SEPR/2014). In Mozambique, research permits were issued by the Museum of Natural History (Ref. 01/MHN/E.27/2015) and the Ministry of Health (N°S/N/SDI/0233/15).

Consent for publication

Not applicable.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Publisher’s Note

Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Maximum Likelihood (ML) consensus tree derived from 143 Astrovirus (AstV) RNA-dependent RNA-polymerase partial nucleotide sequences (380 bp). Colored circles indicate nodes with bootstrap values > 70 in the ML tree, or posterior probabilities higher than 0.7 in the maximum clade credibility tree. Sequence names in bold indicate bat AstVs detected in this study, and were colored according to the bat family. Scale bar indicates mean number of nucleotide substitutions per site

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