Recent evidence findings
Generating research brief from recent literature...
Summarizing recent literature with GPT-5... AI-generated summary. Interpret with care and verify against the source literature.
8 literature
11 hosts
4 countries
| Publication date | Type | Key finding | PMID |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2026-06-06 | Serological Evidence | Over 50% of free-roaming dogs in Bardiya National Park buffer zone tested positive for antibodies to Canine Distemper Virus, indicating enzootic circulation and reservoir potential for spillover to wild carnivores. | 42251375 |
| 2026-05-21 | Genomic Evolution | A henipavirus from shrew kidneys was phylogenetically closely related to Langya virus, suggesting potential human infection risk. | 42198785 |
| 2026-05-20 | Molecular Adaptation | Mutations F110 and G116 in the HN protein of a dove-derived genotype IX NDV strain cause attenuated virulence by reducing HN cell-surface abundance and fusion activity. | 42159397 |
| 2026-05-20 | Cross Species Transmission | Genetic evolution and viral ecology analyses suggest possible poultry-to-wild-bird transmission of genotype IX Newcastle disease virus. | 42159397 |
| 2026-05-09 | Spillover Event | Several viruses, including rotavirus A and parainfluenza virus 5 from Qinghai-Tibet wildlife, were identified as posing a high risk of zoonotic transmission. | 42106372 |
| 2026-04-07 | Genomic Evolution | Bayesian phylodynamic analysis of Nipah virus N gene sequences from human and bat samples in Bangladesh identified two major lineages (BD-1 and BD-2) and ongoing diversification consistent with continued genomic evolution and lineage emergence. | 41817188 |
| 2026-04-07 | Zoonotic Surveillance | Genomic surveillance of Nipah virus isolates from fruit bats and humans in Bangladesh between 2016 and 2023 revealed active viral evolution and spread. | 41817188 |
| 2026-04-07 | Spillover Event | Nipah virus is transmitted from fruit bats to humans in Bangladesh through bat-contaminated food sources. | 41817188 |
| 2026-04 | Molecular Adaptation | The V protein of Hendra virus genotype 1 is more effective at antagonizing type-I interferon and shows different nucleocytoplasmic localization compared to the V protein of genotype 2, demonstrating genotype-specific molecular adaptation in immune evasion. | 42012879 |
| 2026-03-24 | Receptor Usage | Ephrin-B3 receptor usage contributes critically to Nipah virus pathogenicity compared to Ghana virus. | 41824449 |
| 2026-03-24 | Receptor Usage | Ghana virus binds ephrin-B2 but not ephrin-B3, indicating restricted receptor tropism relative to Nipah virus. | 41824449 |
| 2026-03-24 | Host Range Experiment | Ghana virus caused no disease or mortality in experimentally infected Syrian golden hamsters, indicating limited pathogenicity in this mammalian model. | 41824449 |
| 2026-03-24 | Host Range Experiment | Ghana virus replicated poorly in human cells, more strongly in bat cells, and did not cause disease in Syrian golden hamsters, demonstrating host-specific restriction in replication and pathogenesis. | 41824449 |
| 2026-03-24 | Molecular Adaptation | Replacement of Nipah virus receptor-binding protein with that of Ghana virus led to complete attenuation, showing that ephrin-B3 receptor usage drives pathogenicity differences among henipaviruses. | 41824449 |
| 2026-03-24 | Molecular Adaptation | Ghana virus shows receptor binding adaptation to ephrin-B2 but not ephrin-B3 and differential replication in human and bat cells, indicating molecular mechanisms underlying host-specific tropism and attenuation. | 41824449 |
| 2026-03 | Reservoir Ecology | Horse density and winter occupancy of flying fox roosts were positively associated with Hendra virus spillover risk in agricultural landscapes in Australia. | 41235837 |
| 2026-03 | Spillover Event | Hendra virus spillover events were positively associated with horse density and flying fox roost occupancy in agricultural landscapes of southeast Queensland and northeast New South Wales, supporting flying fox-to-horse transmission. | 41235837 |
| 2026-03 | Zoonotic Surveillance | Domestic horse density was monitored through field surveys and found to be positively associated with Hendra virus spillover events in agricultural areas of southeastern Australia. | 41235837 |
Generating research brief from recent literature...
Summarizing recent literature with GPT-5... AI-generated summary. Interpret with care and verify against the source literature.
3 literature
4 hosts
2 countries
| Publication date | Type | Key finding | PMID |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2026-06-06 | Serological Evidence | Over 50% of free-roaming dogs in Bardiya National Park buffer zone tested positive for antibodies to Canine Distemper Virus, indicating enzootic circulation and reservoir potential for spillover to wild carnivores. | 42251375 |
| 2026-05-21 | Genomic Evolution | A henipavirus from shrew kidneys was phylogenetically closely related to Langya virus, suggesting potential human infection risk. | 42198785 |
| 2026-05-20 | Molecular Adaptation | Mutations F110 and G116 in the HN protein of a dove-derived genotype IX NDV strain cause attenuated virulence by reducing HN cell-surface abundance and fusion activity. | 42159397 |
| 2026-05-20 | Cross Species Transmission | Genetic evolution and viral ecology analyses suggest possible poultry-to-wild-bird transmission of genotype IX Newcastle disease virus. | 42159397 |
No publication-dated literature was found for this virus in this window.
Summarizing recent literature with GPT-5... AI-generated summary. Interpret with care and verify against the source literature.
0 literature
0 hosts
0 countries
| Publication date | Type | Key finding | PMID |
|---|---|---|---|
| No publication-dated evidence in this window. | |||