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Browsing by Subject "one health"

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  • Sgarabotto, Elena (2022)
    In the past 20 years, three known disease emergence events of highly pathogenic coronaviruses have highlighted the importance of monitoring wildlife for the presence of these viruses. Their peculiar characteristics, like high mutation and recombination rate, have increased their potential for species adaptation and interspecies transmission. Understanding the diversity of these viruses in wildlife and increased surveillance might be key to predicting and preventing future spillovers and pandemics. Studies on wildlife coronaviruses commonly focus on the order Chiroptera, mainly in temperate and tropical regions of the Asian continent. Even though animals belonging to this order are considered the main reservoir, the importance of other small terrestrial mammals should not be overlooked. Rodents, for instance, are animals of great interest for many zoonoses, as they often host parasites, bacteria and other groups of viruses that cause diseases in humans. A recent description of several lineages of coronaviruses recovered from rodents from China highlighted and suggested the presence of these viruses in small terrestrial rodents. In this project, we aimed to investigate the presence of coronaviruses in small mammals from France. Samples were collected during spring 2021 in twelve different locations, within two regions of eastern France, Auvergne Rhône-Alpes and Franche Comté. A total of 448 rodents, 13 shrews and 416 bat samples were collected. The samples were screened and coronaviruses sequences were recovered in 20 different samples. Nine Betacoronavirus genus sequences were recovered from rodent colon samples, and one Alpha- and ten Betacoronavirus sequences from bat guano. These results confirmed previous evidence of these viruses’ presence in small mammals from France and provide the first evidence of betacoronaviruses circulating in wild French bats. The study covers two eastern regions that have not been surveilled in previously released studies therefore this highlights the need to increase the efforts in monitoring these viruses and their wildlife host