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© Institut Pasteur
Corne d'Ammon (ou hippocampe) de renard atteint de rage sauvage. Coloration avec un conjugué fluorescent sur la nucléocapside du virus.
Publication : Scientific reports

Mechanisms for lyssavirus persistence in non-synanthropic bats in Europe: insights from a modeling study

Scientific Fields
Diseases
Organisms
Applications
Technique

Published in Scientific reports - 24 Jan 2019

Colombi D, Serra-Cobo J, Métras R, Apolloni A, Poletto C, López-Roig M, Bourhy H, Colizza V

Link to Pubmed [PMID] – 30679459

Sci Rep 2019 Jan;9(1):537

Bats are natural reservoirs of the largest proportion of viral zoonoses among mammals, thus understanding the conditions for pathogen persistence in bats is essential to reduce human risk. Focusing on the European Bat Lyssavirus subtype 1 (EBLV-1), causing rabies disease, we develop a data-driven spatially explicit metapopulation model to investigate EBLV-1 persistence in Myotis myotis and Miniopterus schreibersii bat species in Catalonia. We find that persistence relies on host spatial structure through the migratory nature of M. schreibersii, on cross-species mixing with M. myotis, and on survival of infected animals followed by temporary immunity. The virus would not persist in the single colony of M. myotis. Our study provides for the first time epidemiological estimates for EBLV-1 progression in M. schreibersii. Our approach can be readily adapted to other zoonoses of public health concern where long-range migration and habitat sharing may play an important role.