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Characterization of rabies virus isolated from a colony of Eptesicus furinalis bats in Brazil

Caracterização do vírus da raiva isolado de uma colônia de morcegos Eptesicus furinalis, do Brasil

Abstracts

Some bat species have adapted to the expanding human population by acquiring the ability to roost in urban buildings, increasing the exposure risk for people and domestic animals, and consequently, the likelihood of transmitting rabies. Three dead bats were found in the yard of a house in an urban area of Jundiaí city in the state of São Paulo in southeast Brazil. Two of the three bats tested positive for rabies, using Fluorescent Antibody and Mouse Inoculation techniques. A large colony of Eptesicus furinalis was found in the house's attic, and of the 119 bats captured, four more tested positive for rabies. The objectives of this study were to report the rabies diagnosis, characterize the isolated virus antigenically and genetically, and study the epidemiology of the colony.

Rabies; Bats; Eptesicus furinalis; Antigenic typing; Genetic characterization


Algumas espécies de morcegos têm se adaptado ao uso de abrigos em construções urbanas, aumentando a possibilidade de contato desses morcegos com pessoas e animais domésticos e conseqüentemente, o potencial risco de transmissão de raiva. Três morcegos foram encontrados no jardim de uma casa na área urbana da cidade de Jundiaí, Estado de São Paulo, Sudeste do Brasil, dois deles foram positivos para raiva pelas técnicas de imunofluorescência e inoculação em camundongos. Uma grande colônia de E. furinalis foi identificada, vivendo no sótão da casa e 119 morcegos foram encaminhados para diagnóstico de raiva, com mais quatro morcegos positivos. O objetivo desse estudo é apresentar a caracterização genética e antigênica do vírus da raiva isolado desses morcegos e o estudo epidemiológico da colônia.


RABIES

Characterization of rabies virus isolated from a colony of Eptesicus furinalis bats in Brazil

Caracterização do vírus da raiva isolado de uma colônia de morcegos Eptesicus furinalis, do Brasil

Marilene Fernandes de AlmeidaI; Silvana R. FavorettoII,III; Luzia F. Alves MartorelliI; José Trezza-NettoI; Angélica Cristine de Almeida CamposIII; Carlos H. OzahataIV; Miriam Martos SodréI; Ana Paula A. G. KataokaI; Débora R. Veiga SacramentoV; Edison L. DurigonIII

ICentro de Controle de Zoonoses, Coordenação de Vigilância em Saúde/PMSP, São Paulo, SP, Brasil

IILaboratório de Diagnóstico do Instituto Pasteur de São Paulo, Secretaria Estadual da Saúde, São Paulo, SP, Brasil

IIILaboratório de Virologia Clinica e Molecular, Instituto de Ciências Biomédicas/Universidade de São Paulo, São Paulo, SP, Brasil

IVSeção de Controle de Zoonoses/Prefeitura do Município de Jundiaí, Jundiai, SP, Brasil

VGenomic Engenharia Molecular, São Paulo, SP, Brasil

Correspondence to Correspondence to: Marilene F Almeida Phone: +55.11.2251-2666, Fax: +55.11.2251-2249 E-mail: marilene@prefeitura.sp.gov.br

SUMMARY

Some bat species have adapted to the expanding human population by acquiring the ability to roost in urban buildings, increasing the exposure risk for people and domestic animals, and consequently, the likelihood of transmitting rabies. Three dead bats were found in the yard of a house in an urban area of Jundiaí city in the state of São Paulo in southeast Brazil. Two of the three bats tested positive for rabies, using Fluorescent Antibody and Mouse Inoculation techniques. A large colony of Eptesicus furinalis was found in the house's attic, and of the 119 bats captured, four more tested positive for rabies. The objectives of this study were to report the rabies diagnosis, characterize the isolated virus antigenically and genetically, and study the epidemiology of the colony.

Keywords: Rabies; Bats; Eptesicus furinalis; Antigenic typing; Genetic characterization.

RESUMO

Algumas espécies de morcegos têm se adaptado ao uso de abrigos em construções urbanas, aumentando a possibilidade de contato desses morcegos com pessoas e animais domésticos e conseqüentemente, o potencial risco de transmissão de raiva. Três morcegos foram encontrados no jardim de uma casa na área urbana da cidade de Jundiaí, Estado de São Paulo, Sudeste do Brasil, dois deles foram positivos para raiva pelas técnicas de imunofluorescência e inoculação em camundongos. Uma grande colônia de E. furinalis foi identificada, vivendo no sótão da casa e 119 morcegos foram encaminhados para diagnóstico de raiva, com mais quatro morcegos positivos. O objetivo desse estudo é apresentar a caracterização genética e antigênica do vírus da raiva isolado desses morcegos e o estudo epidemiológico da colônia.

INTRODUCTION

In countries where rabies in domestic animals is under control, the majority of human rabies deaths can be attributed to variants of the virus that are associated with bats, as verified by molecular studies11,15,17,36. In the United States from 1958 to 2000, 32 out of 35 human rabies cases were associated with variants specific to insectivorous bats15. Similarly, 148 out of 276 human rabies deaths in Latin America between 2004 and 2010, including 64 deaths in northern Brazil, were caused by contact with hematophagous bats1,4,23,29.

Improvements in canine vaccination programs and stray animal control in Brazil have led to a marked decrease in the incidence of rabies among humans. The number of canine rabies cases has also fallen steadily since 1980, decreasing from greater than 170 cases to 17 cases in 201023. Currently, the majority of human rabies cases in Brazil are caused by exposure to wildlife, including hematophagous bats (Desmodus rotundus), marmosets (Callithrix jacchus jacchus) and crab-eating foxes (Cerdocyon thous). Rabid bats have been documented in most of the Brazilian states, and rabies virus has been isolated from at least 41 of the 172 bats species that exist in Brazil2,31. Interestingly, 29 of the affected species have been observed to take refuge in houses and their surroundings34, increasing the risk of contact with people and domestic animals. According to data from the Pan-American Health Organization23 (2010), among the 1,348 cases of rabies involving bats reported in Latin America between 2000 and 2010, 794 involved non-hematophagous bats (58.9%), while 300 were in hematophagous bats (22.3%). In the remaining 254 cases, the affected species was not characterized (18.8%).

In São Paulo in southeast Brazil, the available data clearly demonstrate an increase in rabies case reporting in bats28. From 1985 to 1996, a total of 33 rabies-positive samples were obtained from bats, which is an average of three cases per year. From 1997 to 2010, 885 new specimens were diagnosed, corresponding to a 21-fold increase in the number of cases per year to 63 cases in average. It remains a possibility that this increase in reported cases could be related to improvements in surveillance and registration, rather than an actual increase in the incidence of rabies in bats.

The objective of this study was to report the rabies diagnoses from a colony of Eptesicus furinalis (Argentine Brown Bat) from Jundiaí city, located in São Paulo State, Brazil. The virus obtained from the colony was characterized antigenically and genetically, and an epidemiological study was conducted. The results were then compared to data from different bat species throughout the Americas.

MATERIAL AND METHODS

E. furinalis bats were obtained from Jundiaí city (23º11'11", 46º53'03"), São Paulo State, in southeast Brazil. Jundiaí is an urban center with 343,000 inhabitants covering an area of 432 km2. Rabies control measures, including vaccination campaigns and surveillance, are well-established in Jundiaí, and the last reported cases of rabies in humans and domestic animals occurred in 1979 and 1981, respectively.

E. furinalis bats were identified according to their family, genus and species using the identification key proposed by VIZOTTO & TADDEI37 (1973). Bats were anesthetized by injection of ketamine hydrochloride into the pectoral muscle (dose was dependent on the weight and volume). Animals were sacrificed in a CO2 chamber.

Rabies diagnoses were determined for brain smears using the Fluorescent Antibody Test6 (FAT) and the Mouse Inoculation Test12 (MIT) at the Rabies Laboratory in the Zoonoses Control Center in the city of São Paulo.

Antigenic characterization was performed as previously reported22, using a panel of eight monoclonal antibodies (MAb) against viral nucleoproteins. MAb were provided by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Atlanta, USA.

Total RNA was extracted from infected bat brains with TRIzol® Reagent (Invitrogen, USA15596-26) according to the manufacturer's recommendations. RT-PCR was performed with primers 21g (5' ATG TAA CAC CTC TAC AAT G 3', nt 55-73) and 304 (5' TTG ACG AAG TCT TGC TCA T 3', nt 1533-1514), which were specifically designed to amplify the rabies virus nucleoprotein as described by SMITH32 (1995). PCR products were purified using the Wizard PCR purification system (Promega, USA). Direct sequencing of the RT-PCR products was performed using the Big Dye Terminator Cycle Sequencing Ready Reaction Kit (Applied Biosystems Inc., USA).

A comparative phylogenetic study was undertaken using nucleotide sequences from different rabies variants collected from GenBank based on the 320-base-pair nucleoprotein gene located at position 1157 to 1476, according to PV strain (GenBank accession number NC_001542). Although the primer set amplifies nearly the complete N gene, the choice of this region was based on the number of sequences already available in GenBank, which are representative of rabies virus isolates found in bat populations and the terrestrial cycle in the Americas. The summary of rabies reference sequence data used is presented in Table 1. Vaccine strains, SAD B19 (M31046) and PV (NC_001542), were used for sequence comparison, and EBL-1 (U22845) and Duvenhage (EU293119) were included to serve as the out group to root the phylogenetic tree.

Alignment of multiple sequences was performed with BioEdit v7.0.9 (1197-2007, Tom Hall, Ibis Biosciences Carlsbad, CA), using the ClustalW method, which groups sequences into clusters by examining sequence distances between all pairs. Phylogenetic trees were constructed using the Neighbor-Joining (NJ) method with Kimura evolutionary distance correction statistics. The branching pattern was statistically evaluated by bootstrap analysis of 10,000 replicates in the program MEGA, version 4.035. Bootstrap values are shown on the tree in Figure 1, which was obtained with the software FigTree v1.1.1 (2007-2008, Andrew Rambaut http://tree.bio.ed.ac.uk/software/figtree/).


RESULTS

In December 2004, three E. furinalis bats were found dead in the yard of a house. Two of them tested positive for rabies by FAT and MIT (one female and one male), while diagnosis of the third bat was not possible. The house was inspected, and a large colony of E. furinalis was discovered in the attic. The colony was composed of 119 bats that were captured with mist nets and identified as 32 young females, 49 adult females, 34 young males and seven adult males (including the first three specimens collected in the yard). Four more bats were positive for rabies using both techniques, three female and one male, all adults. More 64 houses in the neighborhood were inspected for the presence of bats, but no other colonies were discovered. The removal of the colony was conducted in accordance with the technical manual of São Paulo State26 (2003).

Of the six positive samples, five were available for antigenic and genetic characterization. Antigenic characterization of the isolates revealed a single distinct reaction pattern (C4+ C10+ C12+). The region of the genome used to analyze the relationship among strains have been previously evaluated and found to be informative for epidemiological studies9. A portion of the amplified nucleoprotein gene was excluded from the analysis, due to the absence of this region in the majority of the chosen representative sequences.

The nucleotide sequences of the five E. furinalis samples were reported to GenBank (accession numbers DQ631835-DQ631839). The phylogenetic topology tree shows 12 distinct clades: one clade related to terrestrial epidemiological cycle of transmission (clade 12), 10 clades related to aerial epidemiological cycle of transmission maintained by bats population formed by clades from 1 to 10 and an independent one clade 11 corresponding to lineage maintained in Brazilian marmosets (Fig. 1).

The E. furinalis samples shared a high degree of similarity, with 99.0% to 100.0% intrinsic genetic identity, as is expected for isolates from the same colony. These sequences formed a distinct monophyletic clade that was statistically supported by high bootstrap values. When compared to other Brazilian isolates from E. furinalis (AB201811, AB201812, AB201813, AB201814), a distinct clade was observed, but with only 86.1% similarity (Fig. 1, Table 1).

The average pairwise nucleotide identity among rabies viruses related to bats ranges from 85.9% to 93.6%, with the highest percentage occurring among the Brazilian groups of insectivorous bats, such as Histiotus sp.(93.6%) and Nyctinomops laticaudatus (90.3%). The lowest percent identity occurred within D. rotundus bats (85.9%). Even lower identities were observed for the groups formed by the Brazilian marmoset variant (81.2%) and the terrestrial group (78.4%). We were unable to determine a clustering correlation between different samples within the terrestrial cycle of transmission, including the vaccine strains (PV and SAD-B19).

DISCUSSION

E. furinalis bats are colonial, non-migratory and insectivorous, and they can be found in a variety of habitats that includes human dwellings. Colonies of up to 100 bats have been reported in ceilings of houses and yards16. E. furinalis can live as long as 19 years, and females give birth to two offspring per year. During the reproduction period, the bats form maternity colonies, with the males remaining alone or in small groups20. This could explain the predominance of females observed in the colony from which we collected samples.

Although no human rabies cases associated with insectivorous bat have been reported in Brazil, these bats are known to be reservoirs for the rabies viruses throughout the Americas. Insectivorous bats are attracted to urban areas by the insect population, which is attracted to street lamps25. Changes in the landscape due to urban and suburban housing developments may further restrict both the roosting and foraging habitats of bats. In addition, urban ecosystems offer large amounts of food and roosts (attics, roofs, basements, etc.) associated with a lack of predators. Consequently, some bat species have adapted to roosting in buildings13. Although insectivorous bats are useful in controlling nocturnal flying insects24 and other invertebrates that can negatively impact agriculture33, people frequently complain about the presence of bats because of the noise they make and the odor of their urine and excrement27.

The prevalence of the rabies virus within a bat population is very difficult to determine, and in the majority of bat-derived rabies cases, the colony is never located. The case reported here provided a unique opportunity because the shelter and the colony were discovered.

Antigenic characterization was performed by comparison of the monoclonal reaction pattern with the 11 pre-established reactivity profiles characteristic of rabies variants isolated from animals involved with rabies virus maintenance and transmission in Latin America. The antigenic profile observed (C4+, C10+, C12+) was not compatible with the pre-established profiles in this panel. However, the same positive reaction profile has already been detected in samples isolated from a cat, a Cerdocyon thous (crab-eating fox) and in the insectivorous bat Eumops auripendulus8. Moreover, CASTILHO2et al. (2008) reported the same positive reaction in specimens of E. furinalis, Eumops perotis and Eumops auripendulus.

The epidemiology of rabies in the Americas is highly complex, particularly with respect to the role played by insectivorous bats, which has been investigated in several studies3,7,18,21,36. Passive surveillance and molecular epidemiological studies have revealed multiple independent cycles and an expressive diversity of rabies genetic variants maintained in these species. Until now, all characterized viruses have belonged to Rabies virus species, and high homology was observed among rabies from insectivorous bats. Furthermore, the viruses isolated thus far have been more closely related to samples derived from North American bats than they have to vampire bats5. The same results were observed for the samples investigated in this study.

The five isolates segregated into a monophyletic cluster as expected because they are from the same colony. However, 16.0% divergence was observed relative to other Brazilian isolates from the same species. Thus, two phylogenetically distinct lineages of rabies virus are circulating in Brazilian E. furinalis bats within the same state (São Paulo), approximately 380 kilometers from each other. Geographical distribution and non-migratory behavior could explain this fact. The possibility of determining species-specific viral variants for E. furinalis has been discussed previously; however, that particular variant was isolated from Nyctinomops laticaudatus and E. auripendulus10. Our study demonstrates the existence of an additional variant isolated from E. furinalis. Because of the low number of samples analyzed in this study, we cannot confirm that the variants observed in E. furinalis are species-specific, and the same is true for the study by KOBAYASHI10et al. (2005). Interestingly, our analysis suggests that virus lineage is associated with the biome where the host was found. The Brazilian E. furinalis came from an urban area in the city of Jundiaí, while the bats studied by KOBAYASHI10et al. (2005) were collected from a distinct biome in a predominantly rural area with extensive ranching.

A similar case of two rabies lineages circulating in the same species was also observed for E. fuscus by NADIN-DAVIS17et al. (2001). However, it is not possible to relate the results of our study to bat behavior, as discussed by NADIN-DAVIS17et al. (2001) and DAVIS5et al. (2006), because Brazilian E. furinalis bats are not migratory. Another possible explanation for our results would be if different mitochondrial lineages did exist for E. furinalis, as was suggested for E. fuscus by NEUBAUM19et al. (2008) and for D. rotundus by MARTINS14et al. (2007).

The phylogenetic analysis showed only 85.9% similarity between the isolates from the E. furinalis colony and the clade containing viral variants from hematophagous bat populations, pets and herbivorous, non-hematophagous bats, which is consistent with previous studies5,10,17,18,30. However, the segment of the rabies genome used to reconstruct the phylogenetic trees in this study is different from those used in the above-mentioned studies, and therefore, some sequences occupied different positions.

The colony of E. furinalis studied here was roosting in the attic of a house in an urban area. A family had been living in the house for nearly three years, although according to the neighbors, no previous residents had occupied the house for seven or eight years before this family moved in. There were 64 habitable houses in the neighborhood, providing ample opportunities for accidental contact between the bats and domestic animals or people, especially children. The risk of rabies reemerging among domestic animals has already been demonstrated by the isolation of rabies variants specific to insectivorous bats from domestic animals, such as cats8,18,36.

In urban areas where rabies in dogs has been controlled, reports of rabies harbored by bat species have generally increased. Further research is required to characterize the biology and behavior of bats in urban settings, and the precise identification of the bat species involved is essential for determining the role that these species play in the epidemiology of rabies.

Received: 17 December 2009

Accepted: 8 October 2010

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  • Correspondence to:

    Marilene F Almeida
    Phone: +55.11.2251-2666, Fax: +55.11.2251-2249
    E-mail:
  • Publication Dates

    • Publication in this collection
      04 Mar 2011
    • Date of issue
      Feb 2011

    History

    • Received
      17 Dec 2009
    • Accepted
      08 Oct 2010
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