Isolation of Genetically Diverse Marburg Viruses from Egyptian Fruit Bats

Jonathan S. Towner(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Brian R. Amman(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Tara K. Sealy(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Serena A. Carroll(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), James A. Comer(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Alan C. Kemp(National Institute for Communicable Diseases), Robert Swanepoel(National Center for Communicable Diseases), Christopher D. Paddock(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Stephen Balinandi(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Marina L. Khristova(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Pierre Formenty(World Health Organization), César G. Albariño(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), David Miller(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Zachary Reed(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), John Kayiwa(Uganda Virus Research Institute), James N. Mills(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Deborah Cannon(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Patricia W. Greer(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Emmanuel Byaruhanga, Eileen C. Farnon(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Patrick Atimnedi(Uganda Wildlife Authority), Samuel Okware(Ministry of Health), Edward Katongole‐Mbidde(Uganda Virus Research Institute), R. G. Downing(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Jordan W. Tappero(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Sherif R. Zaki(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Thomas G. Ksiazek(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Stuart T. Nichol(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Pierre E. Rollin(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)
PLoS Pathogens
July 30, 2009
Cited by 708Open Access
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Abstract

In July and September 2007, miners working in Kitaka Cave, Uganda, were diagnosed with Marburg hemorrhagic fever. The likely source of infection in the cave was Egyptian fruit bats (Rousettus aegyptiacus) based on detection of Marburg virus RNA in 31/611 (5.1%) bats, virus-specific antibody in bat sera, and isolation of genetically diverse virus from bat tissues. The virus isolates were collected nine months apart, demonstrating long-term virus circulation. The bat colony was estimated to be over 100,000 animals using mark and re-capture methods, predicting the presence of over 5,000 virus-infected bats. The genetically diverse virus genome sequences from bats and miners closely matched. These data indicate common Egyptian fruit bats can represent a major natural reservoir and source of Marburg virus with potential for spillover into humans.


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