Monday, September 23, 2013

Spanish bat study shines new light on spread of coronavirus


Study of chiropterans on the Balearic Islands helps provide clues about transmission of several diseases to humans
Schreiber's bat
Disease risk – the common bent-wing bat. Photograph: Alamy
Picture this: two men with heavy backpacks, clambering up a mountainside in the middle of August in the Inca area of Majorca, 35km north-east of Palma. Neither tourists, nor hunters, they are actually scientists heading for Ratapinyades cave to catch bats. The aim is to study the viruses they carry.
Bats are suspected of being behind Mers-CoV, a  new coronavirus that is causing alarm in the Middle East. Also implicated in a related virus, which caused the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (Sars) in 2002-03 in China, bats seem to be important reservoir hosts for many emerging or re-emerging viruses.
The viruses have caused serious infections ranging from Ebola fever to measles, through encephalitis and rabies. So gaining a better understanding of the viral profile of bats is clearly important.
Unlike other animals, chiropterans do not die when they catch the viruses, which they can transmit through their saliva or excrement. Jordi Serra Cobo and Marc Lopez Roig, two biologists at Barcelona University, have been studying them since the 1990s, when few scientists paid much attention to bats. They have explored colonies in Catalonia and on the Balearic Islands in an effort to understand the infection dynamic, focusing on rabies, which belongs to the lyssavirus group.
It is often exhausting work. Near Inca, after crossing an almond orchard where sheep were grazing and reaching the end of a track used by hunters, they climbed Puig Santa Magdalena. The temperature was over 30C.
After struggling up a rocky path they finally reached the cave. The entrance had been closed with an iron gate since studies by Catalan researchers and a team led by Hervé Bourhy, from the Institut Pasteur in Paris, demonstrated the frequency with which the bats occupying the cave – numbering about 1,000 at any time – acted as carriers for the rabies virus.
To capture these flying mammals the scientists spread nets and waited patiently in the gloom. With the sheep bleating outside, it was not always easy to hear the squeak of bats trapped on their way out in search of food.
Two days later, at Sa Guitarreta, near Llucmajor, some 30km south-east of Palma, Cobo and Roig carried out another procedure, this time in daylight. Following a dry stone wall, bordering another almond plantation, they climbed down a rockface and entered another cavity. About 25 metres below ground, a tunnel opened onto a great hall, a good 15 metres high.
At first, the only sounds to be heard were the beating of wings. Then, in headlamps, they discovered dozens of bats hanging upside down, while others, perhaps disturbed by the intruders, flew back and forth.
Roig unpacked a great butterfly net on the end of a telescopic pole, rising eight metres into the air. Moving cautiously, because the ground was slippery, he climbed on to a rock in order to reach the ceiling. Once netted – and taking care to avoid any bites – the scientists sorted the animals by species and placed them in canvas bags. The largest had a wingspan of 40cm.
On both occasions, it took no time to catch several dozen samples. The researchers then worked for more than two hours in a sort of a field laboratory, set up on an old car bonnet or a flat rock.
Each specimen was treated in exactly the same way. They were examined to confirm their species and gender, then checked for a possible identification ring. In some cases, a numbered ring was fitted. Since 1995 Cobo's team has ringed 2,600 bat specimens on the Balearics and more than 6,000 in mainland Spain.
The scientists then took a saliva sample using a swab. The bat was laid on its back and its left wing was spread out to allow a blood sample to be taken. At Sa Guitarreta, Cobo also took excrement samples.
The blood samples are centrifuged and deep-frozen, prior to being analysed to isolate specific virus antibodies (lyssavirus or flavivirus, the latter genus comprising the dengue, yellow fever, Japanese encephalitis and West Nile viruses). Ribonucleic acid (RNA), the genetic material of these infectious agents, will be isolated too.
The saliva can also be used to detect lyssaviruses. The excrement may contain signs of coronaviruses and hantaviruses responsible for pneumonia or hemorrhagic fever. The results will take a few weeks.
In its most recent publication, in the May issue of PLoS ONE, the team led by Cobo and Bourhy revealed the ecological factors associated with the prevalence of European bat lyssavirus-1 in the serum of almost 2,400 bats captured in 2001-10 in Spain and the Balearics. The lyssavirus was found in more than 20% of the serum samples, rising to 40% for one particular species.
Virus prevalence peaks in July, in the middle of the breeding season. Above all, the high density of a colony (more than 500 specimens) and the fact that several species lived side-by-side was linked to a high prevalence of lyssavirus.
The bats represent the first link in the chain that transmits the virus to humans, leading to public-health measures such as closing bat caves to restrict the risk of human contact.
However, Cobo and Roig say there would be no point in wiping out bat colonies. "They don't attack humans and act as sentinels for viruses circulating in a particular area. Protecting biodiversity also protects human health," Cobo said. Roig points out that "bats, which must eat between a quarter and half of their body weight daily, have a devastating effect on insect populations, which are also vectors for disease".
To confirm this point the two scientists recall that in 2003 floods on neighbouring Minorca killed many bats, drowned in certain caves. In the aftermath, two parasites thrived, attacking oak and pine trees.
This article appeared in Guardian Weekly, which incorporates material from Le Monde

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