Refine
Document Type
- Doctoral Thesis (2)
Language
- English (2) (remove)
Has Fulltext
- yes (2)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (2)
Keywords
- Hanta-Virus (2) (remove)
The aim of this work was to characterize the distribution of TULV in European common vole populations, to clarify the host association of TULV and to investigate correlations between host population dynamics and changes in TULV prevalence. Furthermore, the potential of common voles as reservoir for other rodent-borne pathogens was examined in comparison to other rodent species.
Molecular and serological analysis of rodents captured at 87 locations in Germany, France, Luxembourg, and Austria revealed TULV infections at 53.6 % of all trapping locations. The seroprevalence in common voles was low with a mean of 8.5 % (range: 0 – 19 %). TULV RNA was more often detected (mean: 15.3 %, range 0 - 37.5 %). Field voles (Microtus agrestis) and water voles (Arvicola amphibius) were less often tested positive for TULV: mean seroprevalence was 7 % for field voles and 6.7 % for water voles. RNA could be detected in 5.4 % of all tested field voles and 3.2 % of water voles and with exception of a single field vole only when TULV-RNA-positive common voles were trapped at the same location. Those results indicate that TULV infections of field and water voles are spillover infections from sympatric TULV-infected common voles. Phylogenetic analysis revealed distinct genetic differences between TULV sequences of regions of greater geographical distance which were associated with different evolutionary common vole lineages. Furthermore, we could detect genetic differences between TULV strains from trapping sites close to each other (ca. 10 km).
In a capture-mark-recapture study 1042 common voles captured in live traps in Germany were sampled as well as 225 captured in snap traps. When analyzing the seroprevalence of fluctuating common vole populations over several years and seasons we found a negative correlation between prevalence and population density in the current season but a delayed density-dependent positive correlation between the current population density and seroprevalence in the next season. However, this trend varied geographically between the four trapping locations. Usually, population density as well as seroprevalence peaked at the end of the reproductive period in autumn with the exception of Weissach (2010-2012), Jeeser (2010) and Gotha (2012) where population peaks in summer were observed.
In a pilot study in Austria common voles were captured as well as three other rodent species. They were investigated not only for presence of different viruses (TULV, Dobrava- Belgrade orthohantavirus (DOBV), Puumala orthohantavirus (PUUV), Lymphocytic choriomeningitis mammarenavirus (LCMV), Cowpox virus (CPXV)) but also pathogenic bacteria and endoparasites (Leptospira spp., Toxoplasma gondii, Borrelia afzelii, Coxiella burnetii, Rickettsia spp. und Bartonella spp.). Of all four captured species, common voles were most often infected with at least one pathogen (66.7 %), followed by wood mice (Apodemus sylvaticus) (57.7 %), bank voles (Myodes glareolus) (35 %) and yellow-necked field mice (Apodemus flavicollis) (34.5 %). Common voles were also exceptionally susceptible to multiple infections: 66.7 % of them were infected with two or three different pathogens, compared to 6.9 % of yellow-necked field mice and 2.5 % of bank voles. No multiple infections could be detected in wood mice.
The broad geographic distribution of TULV in its reservoir host is in contrast to the rare reports of human infection but might be explained with a low pathogenicity for humans or with the low prevalence in host populations. In addition, the rare detection of human TULV infections could be a result of the used diagnostic methods. Since the reservoir population is known for its dramatic changes in population density and recurring superabundances which facilitates frequent contact to humans, TULV should more often be considered as cause for human disease in future analysis. In
addition, several other zoonotic pathogens could be detected in common voles which could influence TULV infections in the reservoir host but also TULV transmission to humans and therefore deserve more attention in future research.
Hantaviruses (family Bunyaviridae) are enveloped viruses with a segmented RNA genome of negative polarity. They can cause two different diseases in humans, the hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome in Europe and Asia and the hantavirus cardiopulmonary syndrome in America. The transmission to humans is mainly indirect by inhalation of aerosolized virus-contaminated rodent excreta. In contrast to the initial assumption that hantaviruses are mainly carried by rodents, during the last years many novel hantaviruses were detected in shrews, moles and recently in bats. These findings raise important questions about the evolutionary history of hantaviruses, their host association and adaptation, the role and frequency of spillover infections and host switch events. This study aims to prove the presence, geographical distribution and host association of the rodent-borne Tula virus (TULV) and the shrew-associated Seewis virus (SWSV) in Central Europe. For this purpose, novel laboratory techniques for molecular and serological hantavirus detection were developed. Initially, a broad-spectrum molecular assay to identify small mammal species from Central Europe was developed. This novel assay is based on PCR amplification using degenerated primers targeting the cytochrome b (cyt b) gene, nucleotide sequence analysis of the amplified cyt b gene portion and followed by pairwise sequence comparison to published sequences using the BLAST function of GenBank. Different small mammal species prevalent in Central Europe could be determined by this new approach, including not only representatives of various Rodentia and Soricomorpha, but also representatives of the orders Erinaceomorpha, Lagomorpha, Carnivora and Chiroptera. For characterization of insectivore-borne hantavirus Thottapalayam virus (TPMV), specific monoclonal antibodies were generated that detect native virus in infected mammalian cells. For the detection of TPMV-specific antibodies, Asian house shrew Suncus murinus immunoglobulin G (IgG)-specific antibodies were produced in laboratory mice and rabbit. Using this anti-shrew IgG and recombinant TPMV nucleocapsid (N) protein, an indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was developed allowing the detection of TPMV N protein-specific antibodies in immunized and experimentally TPMV infected shrews. A Pan-Hantavirus SYBR-Green RT-qPCR was developed for the search to novel hantaviruses. By this novel RT-qPCR and other conventional RT-PCR approaches, TULV infections were identified for the first time in the Eurasian water vole Arvicola amphibius from different regions in Germany and Switzerland. The phylogenetic analyses of the different partial TULV small (S)-, medium (M)- and large (L)-genome segment sequences from A. amphibius, with those of Microtus arvalis- and M. agrestis-derived TULV lineages, revealed a geographical, but host-independent clustering and may suggest multiple TULV spillover or a potential host switch from M. arvalis or M. agrestis to A. amphibius. In a further comprehensive study, different shrew species (Sorex araneus, S. minutus, S. coronatus, and S. alpinus) were collected in Germany, Czech Republic, and Slovakia and screened by another L-segment-targeting Pan-Hantavirus RT-PCR approach. This screening revealed hantavirus L-segment sequences in a large number of S. araneus and a few S. minutus indicating a broad geographical distribution of this hantavirus. For detailed analyses, S-segment sequences were obtained, from S. araneus and S. minutus. The sequences demonstrated their similarity to SWSV sequences from Hungary, Finland, Austria and Germany. A detailed phylogenetic analysis showed low intra-cluster sequence variability, but high inter-cluster divergence suggesting a long-term SWSV evolution in local shrew populations. In conclusion, the investigations demonstrated a broad geographical distribution and multiple spillover infections of rodent-borne TULV and shrew-borne SWSV in Europe. The finding of putative spillover transmissions described here and in other studies underline the current problem of the hantavirus reservoir host definition. In contrast to the hypothesis of a long-standing hantavirus–rodent (small mammal) host coevolution, the investigations support a more dynamic evolutionary history of hantavirus diversification including spillover infections and host-switch events. In future in vitro and in vivo infection studies as well as field studies has to define factors determining the host specificity of these hantaviruses.