Decoding the RNA viromes in rodent lungs provides new insight into the origin and evolutionary patterns of rodent-borne pathogens in Mainland Southeast Asia
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Published:2021-01-21
Issue:1
Volume:9
Page:
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ISSN:2049-2618
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Container-title:Microbiome
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Microbiome
Author:
Wu Zhiqiang, Han Yelin, Liu Bo, Li Hongying, Zhu Guangjian, Latinne Alice, Dong Jie, Sun Lilin, Su Haoxiang, Liu Liguo, Du Jiang, Zhou Siyu, Chen Mingxing, Kritiyakan Anamika, Jittapalapong Sathaporn, Chaisiri Kittipong, Buchy Phillipe, Duong Veasna, Yang Jian, Jiang Jinyong, Xu Xiang, Zhou Hongning, Yang Fan, Irwin David M., Morand Serge, Daszak Peter, Wang Jianwei, Jin QiORCID
Abstract
Abstract
Background
As the largest group of mammalian species, which are also widely distributed all over the world, rodents are the natural reservoirs for many diverse zoonotic viruses. A comprehensive understanding of the core virome of diverse rodents should therefore assist in efforts to reduce the risk of future emergence or re-emergence of rodent-borne zoonotic pathogens.
Results
This study aimed to describe the viral range that could be detected in the lungs of rodents from Mainland Southeast Asia. Lung samples were collected from 3284 rodents and insectivores of the orders Rodentia, Scandentia, and Eulipotyphla in eighteen provinces of Thailand, Lao PDR, and Cambodia throughout 2006–2018. Meta-transcriptomic analysis was used to outline the unique spectral characteristics of the mammalian viruses within these lungs and the ecological and genetic imprints of the novel viruses. Many mammalian- or arthropod-related viruses from distinct evolutionary lineages were reported for the first time in these species, and viruses related to known pathogens were characterized for their genomic and evolutionary characteristics, host species, and locations.
Conclusions
These results expand our understanding of the core viromes of rodents and insectivores from Mainland Southeast Asia and suggest that a high diversity of viruses remains to be found in rodent species of this area. These findings, combined with our previous virome data from China, increase our knowledge of the viral community in wildlife and arthropod vectors in emerging disease hotspots of East and Southeast Asia.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China Mega-projects of Science Research for the thirteenth Five-Year Plan CAMS Innovation Fund for Medical Sciences
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Microbiology (medical),Microbiology
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