Literature detail

<i>Alpha</i> and <i>Betacoronavirus</i> Detection in Neotropical Bats from Northeast Brazil Suggests Wide Geographical Distribution and Persistence in Natural Populations.

Thays Figueiroa1 Marina Galvão Bueno2 Patricia Emilia Bento Moura2 Marcione Brito de Oliveira3 José Luís Passos Cordeiro4,5 Nádia Santos-Cavalcante6,7 Giovanny A Camacho Antevere Mazzarotto8 Gabriel Luz Wallau9,10 Leonardo Corrêa da Silva Junior1 Paola Cristina Resende1 Marilda M Mendonça Siqueira1 Maria Ogrzewalska1
Affiliations 10 institutions
  1. Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, IOC, Laboratório de Vírus Respiratórios, Exantemáticos, Enterovírus e Emergências Virais, Rio de Janeiro 21040-900, RJ, Brazil.
  2. Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, IOC, Laboratório de Virologia Comparada e Ambiental, Rio de Janeiro 21040-900, RJ, Brazil.
  3. Museu Nacional, Departamento de Vertebrados, Setor de Mastozoologia, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro 20940-040, RJ, Brazil.
  4. Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, Unidade do Ceará, Área de Saúde e Ambiente, Eusébio, Ceará 61773-270, CE, Brazil.
  5. Plataforma Internacional para Ciência, Tecnologia e Inovação em Saúde (PICTIS), Via do Conhecimento, Edifício Central, 3830-352 Ílhavo, Portugal.
  6. Museu de História Natural do Ceará Prof. Dias da Rocha, Universidade Estadual do Ceará, Pacoti, Ceará 62770-000, CE, Brazil.
  7. Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, Instituto Lêonidas and Maria Deane (ILDM), Unidade da Amazônia, Manaus 69057-070, AM, Brazil.
  8. Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, Unidade do Ceará, Laboratório Analítico de Competências Moleculares e Epidemiológicas, Plataforma de Camelídeos e Produção de Nanocorpos, Eusébio, Ceará 61773-270, CE, Brazil.
  9. Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, Departamento de Entomologia e Núcleo de Bioinformática, Instituto Aggeu Magalhães (IAM), Cidade Universitária, Recife 50740-465, PE, Brazil.
  10. Department of Arbovirology and Entomology, Bernhard Nocht Institute for Tropical Medicine, WHO Collaborating Center for Arbovirus and Hemorrhagic Fever Reference and Research, National Reference Center for Tropical Infectious Diseases, 20359 Hamburg, Germany.
PMID 39943102 2025 Animals (Basel) eng epublish
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Article

Publication summary

The emergence of zoonotic viral diseases, notably exemplified by the recent coronavirus disease pandemic in 2019 (COVID-19), underscores the critical need to understand the dynamics of viruses circulating in wildlife populations. This study aimed to investigate the diversity of coronaviruses in bat populations from northeastern Brazil, particularly in the state of Ceará, where little research on bat pathogens has been conducted previously. Bat sampling was performed between March 2021 and March 2022 across three municipalities, resulting in the collection of oral and rectal swabs from 298 captured individuals. Molecular analyses revealed alphacoronaviruses in multiple bat species. Additionally, a novel <i>Betacoronavirus</i> was identified in <i>Artibeus planirostris</i>, which did not fall within an established subgenus. Phylogenetic placement of these new coronavirus sequences suggests that closely related coronavirus lineages can infect a wide range of bat species sampled in distantly related Brazilian states and biomes. No SARS-CoV-2 and influenza A viruses were found in the sampled bats. These findings expand our understanding of coronavirus diversity in Brazilian bats. The detection of coronaviruses in various bat species underscores the importance of bats as reservoirs for these viruses. The absence of SARS-CoV-2 in the sampled bats indicates a lack of spillback events from human or environmental sources. However, the potential for future transmission events underscores the importance of ongoing surveillance and transmission mitigation protocols in wildlife management practices.

Chiroptera coronaviruses RdRp respiratory viruses South America zoonosis

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

3 total
2 records
Extraction confidence 0.98
Key finding

Alphacoronaviruses and a novel betacoronavirus were detected by molecular analysis in bat populations sampled in northeast Brazil.

Host
Location
Supporting text

Bat sampling was performed between March 2021 and March 2022 across three municipalities, resulting in the collection of oral and rectal swabs from 298 captured individuals. Molecular analyses revealed alphacoronaviruses in multiple bat species. Additionally, a novel Betacoronavirus was identified in Artibeus planirostris.

Method
molecular analyses
Sample type
oral swab; rectal swab
Geographic raw
northeastern Brazil
Country inferred
Brazil
Extraction confidence 0.98
Key finding

A novel betacoronavirus was detected in Artibeus planirostris during bat surveillance in Ceará, Brazil.

Location
Supporting text

A novel Betacoronavirus was identified in Artibeus planirostris from Ceará, Brazil.

Method
molecular analyses
Sample type
oral swab; rectal swab
Geographic raw
Ceará
Country inferred
Brazil
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.85
Key finding

Phylogenetic analysis of coronavirus sequences from Brazilian bats identified a novel Betacoronavirus outside known subgenera, showing that related viral lineages infect multiple bat species across regions.

Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Additionally, a novel Betacoronavirus was identified in Artibeus planirostris, which did not fall within an established subgenus. Phylogenetic placement of these new coronavirus sequences suggests that closely related coronavirus lineages can infect a wide range of bat species sampled in distantly related Brazilian states and biomes.

Genes or proteins
RdRp
Analysis methods
phylogenetic analysis