Literature detail

Bat guano virome: predominance of dietary viruses from insects and plants plus novel mammalian viruses.

Linlin Li1 Joseph G Victoria Chunlin Wang Morris Jones Gary M Fellers Thomas H Kunz Eric Delwart
Affiliations 1 institutions
  1. Blood Systems Research Institute. 270 Masonic Ave., San Francisco, CA 94118, USA.
PMID 20463061 2010 J Virol eng ppublish
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Article

Publication summary

Bats are hosts to a variety of viruses capable of zoonotic transmissions. Because of increased contact between bats, humans, and other animal species, the possibility exists for further cross-species transmissions and ensuing disease outbreaks. We describe here full and partial viral genomes identified using metagenomics in the guano of bats from California and Texas. A total of 34% and 58% of 390,000 sequence reads from bat guano in California and Texas, respectively, were related to eukaryotic viruses, and the largest proportion of those infect insects, reflecting the diet of these insectivorous bats, including members of the viral families Dicistroviridae, Iflaviridae, Tetraviridae, and Nodaviridae and the subfamily Densovirinae. The second largest proportion of virus-related sequences infects plants and fungi, likely reflecting the diet of ingested insects, including members of the viral families Luteoviridae, Secoviridae, Tymoviridae, and Partitiviridae and the genus Sobemovirus. Bat guano viruses related to those infecting mammals comprised the third largest group, including members of the viral families Parvoviridae, Circoviridae, Picornaviridae, Adenoviridae, Poxviridae, Astroviridae, and Coronaviridae. No close relative of known human viral pathogens was identified in these bat populations. Phylogenetic analysis was used to clarify the relationship to known viral taxa of novel sequences detected in bat guano samples, showing that some guano viral sequences fall outside existing taxonomic groups. This initial characterization of the bat guano virome, the first metagenomic analysis of viruses in wild mammals using second-generation sequencing, therefore showed the presence of previously unidentified viral species, genera, and possibly families. Viral metagenomics is a useful tool for genetically characterizing viruses present in animals with the known capability of direct or indirect viral zoonosis to humans.

Diet Animals California Chiroptera Disease Outbreaks Disease Reservoirs Feces Genome, Viral Humans Insecta Mammals Metagenomics Phylogeny Plants Sequence Analysis, DNA Texas Virus Diseases Viruses

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

4 total
2 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

Metagenomic surveillance of bat guano in California and Texas detected diverse viral genomes including insect, plant, fungal, and mammalian viruses.

Host
Location
Supporting text

We describe here full and partial viral genomes identified using metagenomics in the guano of bats from California and Texas.

Method
metagenomics; second-generation sequencing
Sample type
guano; feces
Geographic raw
California
Country inferred
United States
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

Metagenomic surveillance of bat guano in Texas detected diverse viral genomes including insect, plant, fungal, and mammalian viruses.

Host
Location
Supporting text

We describe here full and partial viral genomes identified using metagenomics in the guano of bats from California and Texas.

Method
metagenomics; second-generation sequencing
Sample type
guano; feces
Geographic raw
Texas
Country inferred
United States
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.85
Key finding

Metagenomic sequencing and phylogenetic analysis of viral genomes from bat guano showed novel viral taxa, some outside existing classifications, indicating genomic evolution and diversity among bat-associated viruses.

Virus
Not specified
Host
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

We describe here full and partial viral genomes identified using metagenomics in the guano of bats from California and Texas... Phylogenetic analysis was used to clarify the relationship to known viral taxa of novel sequences detected in bat guano samples, showing that some guano viral sequences fall outside existing taxonomic groups.

Genes or proteins
whole genome
Analysis methods
metagenomics; phylogenetic analysis
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

Metagenomic sequencing of bat guano from California and Texas showed that most detected viral sequences were dietary in origin (insect and plant viruses) but also included mammalian viruses, indicating diverse viral ecology associated with bat guano.

Host
Location
Supporting text

We describe here full and partial viral genomes identified using metagenomics in the guano of bats from California and Texas. A total of 34% and 58% of 390,000 sequence reads from bat guano in California and Texas, respectively, were related to eukaryotic viruses, and the largest proportion of those infect insects, reflecting the diet of these insectivorous bats.

Method
metagenomics
Sample type
guano
Geographic raw
California and Texas
Country inferred
United States