Literature detail

Sin Nombre hantavirus decreases survival of male deer mice.

Angela D Luis1 Richard J Douglass Peter J Hudson James N Mills Ottar N Bjørnstad
Affiliations 1 institutions
  1. Department of Biology, Center for Infectious Disease Dynamics, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA. [email protected]
PMID 22218940 2012 Oecologia eng ppublish
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Article

Publication summary

How pathogens affect their hosts is a key question in infectious disease ecology, and it can have important influences on the spread and persistence of the pathogen. Sin Nombre virus (SNV) is the etiological agent of hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS) in humans. A better understanding of SNV in its reservoir host, the deer mouse, could lead to improved predictions of the circulation and persistence of the virus in the mouse reservoir, and could help identify the factors that lead to increased human risk of HPS. Using mark-recapture statistical modeling on longitudinal data collected over 15 years, we found a 13.4% decrease in the survival of male deer mice with antibodies to SNV compared to uninfected mice (both male and female). There was also an additive effect of breeding condition, with a 21.3% decrease in survival for infected mice in breeding condition compared to uninfected, non-breeding mice. The data identified that transmission was consistent with density-dependent transmission, implying that there may be a critical host density below which SNV cannot persist. The notion of a critical host density coupled with the previously overlooked disease-induced mortality reported here contribute to a better understanding of why SNV often goes extinct locally and only seems to persist at the metapopulation scale, and why human spillover is episodic and hard to predict.

Animals Disease Reservoirs Female Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome Humans Longitudinal Studies Male Models, Statistical Montana Peromyscus Population Density Rodent Diseases Sin Nombre virus Zoonoses

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

2 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

Sin Nombre virus infection decreases survival of male deer mice and virus persistence depends on host population density, indicating density-dependent transmission in the reservoir.

Location
Supporting text

We found a 13.4% decrease in the survival of male deer mice with antibodies to Sin Nombre virus compared to uninfected mice. Transmission was consistent with density-dependent transmission, implying that there may be a critical host density below which SNV cannot persist.

Method
mark-recapture statistical modeling; longitudinal data collection
Geographic raw
Montana
Country inferred
United States
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

Male deer mice with antibodies to Sin Nombre virus showed decreased survival compared to uninfected mice.

Location
Not specified
Supporting text

We found a 13.4% decrease in the survival of male deer mice with antibodies to SNV compared to uninfected mice.

Sample type
serum