Lethal Borna disease virus 1 infections of humans and animals - in-depth molecular epidemiology and phylogeography.
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
September 10, 2024
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute
Contributor
Ebinger, Arnt | |
Santos, Pauline D | |
Pfaff, Florian | |
Dürrwald, Ralf | |
Kolodziejek, Jolanta | |
Schlottau, Kore | |
Ruf, Viktoria | |
Liesche-Starnecker, Friederike | |
Ensser, Armin | |
Korn, Klaus | |
Ulrich, Reiner | |
Fürstenau, Jenny | |
Matiasek, Kaspar | |
Hansmann, Florian | |
Nobach, Daniel | |
Neubauer-Juric, Antonie | |
Suchowski, Marcel | |
Bauswein, Markus | |
Niller, Hans-Helmut | |
Schmidt, Barbara | |
Tappe, Dennis | |
Cadar, Daniel | |
Homeier-Bachmann, Timo | |
Haring, Viola C | |
Pörtner, Kirsten | |
Frank, Christina | |
Mundhenk, Lars | |
Hoffmann, Bernd | |
Herms, Jochen | |
Baumgärtner, Wolfgang | |
Nowotny, Norbert | |
Schlegel, Jürgen | |
Ulrich, Rainer G | |
Beer, Martin | |
Rubbenstroth, Dennis |
Series
Nature Communications
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
2041-1723
Publisher
Nature Research
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
39256401
Description
Borna disease virus 1 (BoDV-1) is the causative agent of Borna disease, a fatal neurologic disorder of domestic mammals and humans, resulting from spill-over infection from its natural reservoir host, the bicolored white-toothed shrew (Crocidura leucodon). The known BoDV-1-endemic area is remarkably restricted to parts of Germany, Austria, Switzerland and Liechtenstein. To gain comprehensive data on its occurrence, we analysed diagnostic material from suspected BoDV-1-induced encephalitis cases based on clinical and/or histopathological diagnosis. BoDV-1 infection was confirmed by RT-qPCR in 207 domestic mammals, 28 humans and seven wild shrews. Thereby, this study markedly raises the number of published laboratory-confirmed human BoDV-1 infections and provides a first comprehensive summary. Generation of 136 new BoDV-1 genome sequences from animals and humans facilitated an in-depth phylogeographic analysis, allowing for the definition of risk areas for zoonotic BoDV-1 transmission and facilitating the assessment of geographical infection sources. Consistent with the low mobility of its reservoir host, BoDV-1 sequences showed a remarkable geographic association, with individual phylogenetic clades occupying distinct areas. The closest genetic relatives of most human-derived BoDV-1 sequences were located at distances of less than 40 km, indicating that spill-over transmission from the natural reservoir usually occurs in the patient´s home region.
File(s)
| File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| s41467-024-52192-x.pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 4.21 MB | published |