Discovery and Genomic Characterization of a Novel Henipavirus, Angavokely Virus, from Fruit Bats in Madagascar

Archive ouverte

Madera, Sharline | Kistler, Amy | Ranaivoson, Hafaliana | Ahyong, Vida | Andrianiaina, Angelo | Andry, Santino | Raharinosy, Vololoniaina | Randriambolamanantsoa, Tsiry, H. | Ravelomanantsoa, Ny Anjara Fifi | Tato, Cristina, M. | DeRisi, Joseph, L. | Aguilar, Hector, C. | Lacoste, Vincent | Dussart, Philippe | Héraud, Jean-Michel | Brook, Cara, E.

Edité par CCSD ; American Society for Microbiology -

International audience. The genus Henipavirus (family Paramyxoviridae) currently comprises seven viruses, four of which have demonstrated prior evidence of zoonotic capacity. These include the biosafety level 4 agents Hendra (HeV) and Nipah (NiV) viruses, which circulate naturally in pteropodid fruit bats. Here, we describe and characterize Angavokely virus (AngV), a divergent henipavirus identified in urine samples from wild, Madagascar fruit bats. We report the nearly complete 16,740-nucleotide genome of AngV, which encodes the six major henipavirus structural proteins (nucleocapsid, phosphoprotein, matrix, fusion, glycoprotein, and L polymerase). Within the phosphoprotein (P) gene, we identify an alternative start codon encoding the AngV C protein and a putative mRNA editing site where the insertion of one or two guanine residues encodes, respectively, additional V and W proteins. In other paramyxovirus systems, C, V, and W are accessory proteins involved in antagonism of host immune responses during infection. Phylogenetic analysis suggests that AngV is ancestral to all four previously described bat henipaviruses—HeV, NiV, Cedar virus (CedV), and Ghanaian bat virus (GhV)—but evolved more recently than rodent- and shrew-derived henipaviruses, Mojiang (MojV), Gamak (GAKV), and Daeryong (DARV) viruses. Predictive structure-based alignments suggest that AngV is unlikely to bind ephrin receptors, which mediate cell entry for all other known bat henipaviruses. Identification of the AngV receptor is needed to clarify the virus’s potential host range. The presence of V and W proteins in the AngV genome suggest that the virus could be pathogenic following zoonotic spillover.IMPORTANCE Henipaviruses include highly pathogenic emerging zoonotic viruses, derived from bat, rodent, and shrew reservoirs. Bat-borne Hendra (HeV) and Nipah (NiV) are the most well-known henipaviruses, for which no effective antivirals or vaccines for humans have been described. Here, we report the discovery and characterization of a novel henipavirus, Angavokely virus (AngV), isolated from wild fruit bats in Madagascar. Genomic characterization of AngV reveals all major features associated with pathogenicity in other henipaviruses, suggesting that AngV could be pathogenic following spillover to human hosts. Our work suggests that AngV is an ancestral bat henipavirus that likely uses viral entry pathways distinct from those previously described for HeV and NiV. In Madagascar, bats are consumed as a source of human food, presenting opportunities for cross-species transmission. Characterization of novel henipaviruses and documentation of their pathogenic and zoonotic potential are essential to predicting and preventing the emergence of future zoonoses that cause pandemics.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Full Genome Nobecovirus Sequences From Malagasy Fruit Bats Define a Unique Evolutionary History for This Coronavirus Clade

Archive ouverte | Kettenburg, Gwenddolen | CCSD

International audience. Bats are natural reservoirs for both Alpha - and Betacoronaviruses and the hypothesized original hosts of five of seven known zoonotic coronaviruses. To date, the vast majority of bat coronav...

Detection, characterization, and phylogenetic analysis of novel astroviruses from endemic Malagasy fruit bats

Archive ouverte | Horigan, Sophia | CCSD

Les affiliations de JM Heraud ont été corrigées dans la correction : DOI 10.1186/s12985-024-02527-3. Le PDF de la correction est en fichier annexe. International audience. Bats (order: Chiroptera) are known to host ...

The COVID‐19 epidemic in Madagascar: clinical description and laboratory results of the first wave, march‐september 2020

Archive ouverte | Randremanana, Rindra Vatosoa | CCSD

International audience. Background: Following the first detection of SARS-CoV-2 in passengers arriving from Europe on 19 March 2020, Madagascar took several mitigation measures to limit the spread of the virus in th...

Chargement des enrichissements...