Literature detail

Infectome Landscape of Rodents and Shrews in Guangdong Province Reveals Diverse Pathogens with Zoonotic Potential in Wildlife.

Yukun Lin1,2 Fenxiang Li2 Peiyu Liang3 Yangzi Zhou4 Lihua Zhang1 Wudi Zhou2 Yufeng Liang2 Ruolan Yu2 Wei Yang2 Zhijian Zhou2 Zeliang Wei2 Jian He2 Jingzhe Jiang3 Huacheng Yan2
Affiliations 4 institutions
  1. School of Public Health, Guangzhou Medical University, Guangzhou 511436, China.
  2. Southern China Center for Disease Control and Prevention, Guangzhou 510507, China.
  3. Jiangsu Province Engineering Research Center for Marine Bio-Resources Sustainable Utilization and College of Oceanography, Hohai University, Nanjing 210098, China.
  4. Institute of Pathogen Biology, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical College, Beijing 102629, China.
PMID 42198785 2026 Viruses eng epublish
PubMed DOI Browse context

Article

Publication summary

Rodents and shrews are important reservoir hosts due to their close association with human activities and their role in carrying various zoonotic pathogens. Recently, meta-transcriptomic sequencing has become a powerful tool for surveilling and screening novel pathogens from wild animals. However, many of these studies focused only on the diversity and genetic evolution of viruses from wildlife, while ignoring non-viral pathogens such as bacterial and eukaryotic microorganisms. Here, we performed a comprehensive infectome analysis of 227 tissue samples collected from 42 rodents and 16 shrews across six cities of Guangdong Province, China. We identified 34 viral families, including 23 mammalian viruses. Phylogenetic analysis revealed a henipavirus from the kidneys of shrews closely related to the Langya virus with potential infection risks to humans. Additionally, two potential pathogenic bacteria and 12 eukaryotic pathogens from six genera were found, showing clearer organ tropism than viruses. Interestingly, a moderate positive abundance correlation between <i>Usmuvirus newyorkense</i> and <i>Trichinella</i> suggested a potential virus-parasite association. We used machine learning models to evaluate the zoonotic potential of the obtained viruses, which indicated that 15 of 23 viral species were high risk for human infection. These findings provide important insight into the substantial zoonotic threat posed by pathogens circulating in wild small mammals in southern China and highlight the necessity for persistent wildlife pathogen surveillance.

infectome landscape phylogenetic analysis rodents shrews zoonotic potential Animals, Wild Rodentia Shrews Viruses Zoonoses Animals China Disease Reservoirs Humans Phylogeny

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

2 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.88
Key finding

A henipavirus from shrew kidneys was phylogenetically closely related to Langya virus, suggesting potential human infection risk.

Host
Location
Supporting text

Phylogenetic analysis revealed a henipavirus from the kidneys of shrews closely related to the Langya virus with potential infection risks to humans.

Method
phylogenetic analysis
Sample type
kidneys
Study design
phylogenetic analysis
Transmission direction
animal reservoir only
Event type
phylogenetic relatedness to known zoonotic virus
Geographic raw
Guangdong Province | China
Country inferred
CHN
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

Meta-transcriptomic sequencing of rodents and shrews in Guangdong Province identified diverse mammalian viruses with predicted zoonotic potential.

Virus
Not specified
Location
Supporting text

Here, we performed a comprehensive infectome analysis of 227 tissue samples collected from 42 rodents and 16 shrews across six cities of Guangdong Province, China. We identified 34 viral families, including 23 mammalian viruses... We used machine learning models to evaluate the zoonotic potential of the obtained viruses, which indicated that 15 of 23 viral species were high risk for human infection.

Method
meta-transcriptomic sequencing | phylogenetic analysis | machine learning risk prediction
Sample type
tissue samples | kidneys
Study design
metagenomic surveillance
Transmission direction
animal reservoir only
Event type
meta-transcriptomic wildlife surveillance
Geographic raw
Guangdong Province | China
Country inferred
CHN