Substantial viral diversity in bats and rodents from East Africa: insights into evolution, recombination, and cocirculation

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  • Daxi Wang
  • Xinglou Yang
  • Zirui Ren
  • Ben Hu
  • Hailong Zhao
  • Kaixin Yang
  • Peibo Shi
  • Zhipeng Zhang
  • Qikai Feng
  • Carol Vannesa Nawenja
  • Vincent Obanda
  • Kityo Robert
  • Betty Nalikka
  • Cecilia Njeri Waruhiu
  • Griphin Ochieng Ochola
  • Samson Omondi Onyuok
  • Harold Ochieng
  • Bei Li
  • Yan Zhu
  • Haorui Si
  • Jiefang Yin
  • Xin Jin
  • Xun Xu
  • Minfeng Xiao
  • Bernard Agwanda
  • Sheila Ommeh
  • Junhua Li
  • Zheng Li Shi

Background: Zoonotic viruses cause substantial public health and socioeconomic problems worldwide. Understanding how viruses evolve and spread within and among wildlife species is a critical step when aiming for proactive identification of viral threats to prevent future pandemics. Despite the many proposed factors influencing viral diversity, the genomic diversity and structure of viral communities in East Africa are largely unknown. Results: Using 38.3 Tb of metatranscriptomic data obtained via ultradeep sequencing, we screened vertebrate-associated viromes from 844 bats and 250 rodents from Kenya and Uganda collected from the wild. The 251 vertebrate-associated viral genomes of bats (212) and rodents (39) revealed the vast diversity, host-related variability, and high geographic specificity of viruses in East Africa. Among the surveyed viral families, Coronaviridae and Circoviridae showed low host specificity, high conservation of replication-associated proteins, high divergence among viral entry proteins, and frequent recombination. Despite major dispersal limitations, recurrent mutations, cocirculation, and occasional gene flow contribute to the high local diversity of viral genomes. Conclusions: The present study not only shows the landscape of bat and rodent viromes in this zoonotic hotspot but also reveals genomic signatures driven by the evolution and dispersal of the viral community, laying solid groundwork for future proactive surveillance of emerging zoonotic pathogens in wildlife. F1ZzYbc5Jf4XpNJGrZx-82 Video Abstract

Original languageEnglish
Article number72
JournalMicrobiome
Volume12
Issue number1
Number of pages17
ISSN2049-2618
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2024.

    Research areas

  • Evolution, Metatranscriptome, Viral surveillance, Virome

ID: 388830036