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Public health surveillance for Australian bat lyssavirus, in Queensland, Australia, 2000-2001. (Dispatches).


From February 1,2000, to December 4, 2001, a total of 119 bats (85 Megachiroptera and 34 Microchiroptera) were tested for Australian bat lyssavirus
"ABLV" redirects here. ABLV is also the callsign of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation's TV station in Gippsland and the Latrobe Valley, Victoria.
Australian bat lyssavirus (ABLV)
 (ABLV ABLV Air-Breathing Launch Vehicle
ABLV American Bank of the Lehigh Valley (Allentown, Pennsylvania)
ABLV Australian Bat Lyssa Virus
) infection. Eight Megachiroptera were positive by immunofluorescence Immunofluorescence

A technique that uses a fluorochrome to indicate the occurrence of a specific antigen-antibody reaction. The fluorochrome labels either an antigen or an antibody.
 assay that used cross-reactive antibodies to rabies rabies (rā`bēz, ră`–) or hydrophobia (hī'drəfō`bēə), acute viral infection of the central nervous system in dogs, foxes, raccoons, skunks, bats, and other animals, and in  nucleocapsid nucleocapsid /nu·cleo·cap·sid/ (noo?kle-o-kap´sid) a unit of viral structure, consisting of a capsid with the enclosed nucleic acid.

nu·cle·o·cap·sid
n.
 protein. A case study of cross-species transmission of ABLV supports the conclusion that a bat reservoir exists for ABLV in which the virus circulates across Megachiroptera species within mixed communities.

**********

Since the identification of Australian bat lyssavirus (ABLV) in bat species throughout Australia (1), public health units have been forced to confront its implications for human health. Fortunately, because of the close genetic and serologic se·rol·o·gy  
n. pl. se·rol·o·gies
1. The science that deals with the properties and reactions of serums, especially blood serum.

2.
 relationship between rabies and ABLV, rabies immune sera and vaccines offer postexposure protection from infection (1,2). A bite or scratch from a bat in Australia constitutes a potential exposure to ABLV, and persons affected should be offered postexposure prophylaxis Postexposure prophylaxis (PEP)
Any treatment given after exposure to a disease to try to prevent the disease from occurring. In the case of rabies, PEP involves a series of vaccines given to an individual who has been bitten by an unknown animal or one that is
 unless the bat can be shown to be uninfected with ABLV. However, such prophylaxis prophylaxis (prō'fĭlăk`sĭs), measures designed to prevent the occurrence of disease or its dissemination. Some examples of prophylaxis are immunization against serious diseases such as smallpox or diphtheria; quarantine to confine  is costly and uncomfortable, and immune sera are in short supply worldwide. As many bats involved in such incidents are uninfected, and a negative results obviates the need for postexposure prophylaxis, determining each bat's ABLV infection status is preferable. Under instruction from the public health units, Queensland Health Scientific Services Public Health Virology virology, study of viruses and their role in disease. Many viruses, such as animal RNA viruses and viruses that infect bacteria, or bacteriophages, have become useful laboratory tools in genetic studies and in work on the cellular metabolic control of gene expression  Laboratory has tested bats for ABLV since July 1998.

Two strains of ABLV are known to be circulating. One strain was isolated from a species of insectivorous insectivorous

eating insects to the extent that they are significant as a contributor to the patient's diet.
 Microchiroptera, Saccolaimus flaviventris (1). A second strain has been shown to infect the four species of Megachiroptera in the genus Pteropus that occur in mainland Australia (1,3). Isolates from the four pteropid species show minimal sequence variation with geographic origin and species and are essentially identical (I.L. Smith, unpub. data). Pteropid bats are nomadic See nomadic computing.  nocturnal mammals that roost in trees during the day in colonies that frequently number in the thousands. Colonies may contain one or more species, and fluctuate in size, depending on available food resource (4). This dynamic social structure has been evoked to explain the circulation of a single strain of ABLV in pteropids (1).

In this article, we report on surveillance of bats brought in for testing to our laboratory. A case is described in which circumstantial evidence circumstantial evidence

In law, evidence that is drawn not from direct observation of a fact at issue but from events or circumstances that surround it. If a witness arrives at a crime scene seconds after hearing a gunshot to find someone standing over a corpse and holding a
 exists for bat-to-bat cross-species transmission of ABLV. This finding is consistent with a model in which the social structure of pteropid camps results in a single strain of circulating virus.

The Study

Bats involved in incidents involving public health were tested for ABLV infection by immunofluorescence assay (IFA Immunofluorescent assay (IFA)
A blood test sometimes used to confirm ELISA results instead of using the Western blotting. In an IFA test, HIV antigen is mixed with a fluorescent compound and then with a sample of the patient's blood.
) on brain impression smears by using a fluorescein fluorescein /flu·o·res·ce·in/ (fldbobr-res´en) a fluorescing dye; its sodium salt is used as a tracer in retinal angiography and as a diagnostic aid for revealing corneal trauma and fitting contact lenses.  isothiocyanate-conjugated monoclonal (Fujirebio Diagnostics, Malvern, PA) or polyclonal polyclonal /poly·clo·nal/ (-klon´'l)
1. derived from different cells.

2. pertaining to several clones.


polyclonal

derived from different cells; pertaining to several clones.
 (Biorad, Hercules, CA) antibodies to the nucleocapsid protein. The IFA was performed in parallel with a fluorescent real-time polymerase chain reaction In Molecular Biology, real-time polymerase chain reaction, also called quantitative real time polymerase chain reaction (QRT-PCR) or kinetic polymerase chain reaction  (PCR PCR polymerase chain reaction.

PCR
abbr.
polymerase chain reaction


Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) 
) assay (5) for pteropid samples, or a heminested reverse transcriptase Reverse transcriptase

Any of the deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) polymerases present in particles of retroviruses which are able to carry out DNA synthesis using an RNA template.
 (RT)-PCR for all others (6). When it was possible, the bat was identified to the species level (7). For molecular analyses, the region encoding the carboxy-terminal of the glycoprotein glycoprotein (glī'kōprō`tēn), organic compound composed of both a protein and a carbohydrate joined together in covalent chemical linkage.  and its long 3' untranslated region were amplified by RT-PCR RT-PCR

reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. See PCR1.
, and the products were directly sequenced by using Big-Dye chemistry (Applied Biosystems Applied Biosystems, Inc. (formerly NASDAQ: ABIO) is the original name of a pioneer biotechnology company founded in 1981 in Foster City, California, among the Silicon Valley cities of the southern San Francisco Bay Area. , Foster City, CA). Primers and reaction details are available on request.

During February 1, 2000, to December 4, 2001, a total of 119 bats, including 85 Megachiroptera and 34 Microchiroptera, were submitted for testing to the Public Health Virology Laboratory, Queensland Health Scientific Services. Bats submitted for testing had either bitten or scratched a person, or testing was considered to be in the interests of public health. Eight bats tested positive for ABLV infection by IFA (Table 1). Six of the bats positive for ABLV were P. alecto (75%); one bat positive for ABLV was P. poliocephalus (12.5%), and another bat that tested positive was an unidentified member of the genus Pteropus (12.5%). No positive Microchiroptera were obtained during the study period. Positive bats were from the Rockhampton area (37.5%), south of the Brisbane South metropolitan area (25%), Townsville area (12.5%), Sunshine Coast There are several places around the globe that use the name Sunshine Coast. They are collections of coastal towns and/or cities that have banded together, usually for tourist promotional reasons. This list contains only those regions that use the English version of the name.  area (12.5%), and Brisbane South Coast area (12.5%). Confirmatory real-time or heminested RT-PCR results were concordant with IFA in all cases. Controls for contamination were negative for ABLV.

In October 2000, a wild Black Flying Fox (bat 1, P. alecto) that was acting aggressively was removed from the top of a dome-shaped wire-mesh enclosure for viewing bats at a zoo in Rockhampton. Inside this enclosure were housed 23 flying foxes, all previously well. No new bats had been added to the cage for 12 months. The animal was euthanized and sent for testing to Queensland Health Scientific Services where it tested positive for ABLV by IFA on brain impression smear. One month later a captive Gray-headed Flying Fox (bat 2, P. poliocephalus) from within the enclosure was observed behaving abnormally. Normally a highly social animal, the bat was not moving freely and was licking its vulva vulva /vul·va/ (vul´vah) [L.] the external genital organs of the female, including the mons pubis, labia majora and minora, clitoris, and vestibule of the vagina.  profusely pro·fuse  
adj.
1. Plentiful; copious.

2. Giving or given freely and abundantly; extravagant: were profuse in their compliments.
. The animal was relocated to an isolation cage where, during the next 20 hours, it exhibited a progressive neurologic syndrome. The bat was euthanized and found to be positive for ABLV by IFA.

To enable molecular epidemiologic studies to be carried out, the genomic RNA RNA: see nucleic acid.
RNA
 in full ribonucleic acid

One of the two main types of nucleic acid (the other being DNA), which functions in cellular protein synthesis in all living cells and replaces DNA as the carrier of genetic
 extracted from the brain of the two flying foxes mentioned previously, from another three other flying foxes from disparate locations (two Black Flying Foxes and one Little Red Flying Fox [P. scapulatus]), and from a person who acquired a fatal infection attributed to a flying fox were amplified across the variable noncoding intergenic region An Intergenic region is a stretch of DNA sequences located between clusters of genes that comprise a large percentage of the human genome but contain few or no genes. Occasionally some intergenic DNA acts to control genes close by, but most of it has no currently known function.  between the glycoprotein and polymerase. The reaction products were directly sequenced, and the differences are presented in Table 2. Of the six differences among the sequenced isolates, five were unique to both bats 1 and 2 submitted by the zoo. To date, ABLV sequence variation in flying foxes has been minimal across location, species, and time (I.L. Smith, unpub. data), so the identical variation seen in these two bats supports a model of natural cross-species bat-to-bat transmission.

The remaining captive bats in the enclosure were quarantined in a private facility off-site and were closely monitored for clinical, serologic, and behavioral changes during the next 3 months, and then for a further 3 months after they returned to their original enclosure. No attributable clinical disease, sero-conversion, or behavioral change was observed during this time. The bat enclosure was modified to incorporate an extra outer mesh layer to prevent future direct contact with free-living wild bats outside the enclosure. Existing double-fencing had already prevented the public from having direct contact with flying foxes in the enclosure.

Conclusions

The infection prevalence of 9.4% in submitted flying foxes in this study is not statistically significantly higher than that previously observed (6%) in sick, injured, and orphan flying fox submissions (3; H.E. Field, unpub.data); the wide 95% confidence interval confidence interval,
n a statistical device used to determine the range within which an acceptable datum would fall. Confidence intervals are usually expressed in percentages, typically 95% or 99%.
 (CI) (4% to 18%) reflects the limited sample size in this study. The prevalence is, however, statistically significantly higher than that observed in wild-caught flying foxes (3; H.E. Field, unpub, data), reinforcing the contention that the subpopulation sub·pop·u·la·tion  
n.
A part or subdivision of a population, especially one originating from some other population: microbial subpopulations.

Noun 1.
 of sick and injured flying foxes poses a higher risk for exposed humans. None of the submitted Microchiroptera was positive for ABLV. The small sample size in this study limits meaningful interpretation of this observation (the 95% CI for 0% prevalence with a sample size of 34 is 0% to 10%). Although this finding could indicate a lower incidence of ABLV in communities of Microchiroptera, downplaying the risk for human exposure posed by Microchiroptera in Australia would be premature.

The incident showing transmission from an ABLV-infected wild flying fox to a captive flying fox is interesting in two respects. First, an incubation period incubation period
n.
1. See latent period.

2. See incubative stage.


Incubation period 
 for the virus can be estimated. Assuming the scratch/bite occurred close to the time when the wild bat was discovered, the captive bat was observed to display symptoms after 29 days. This period compares with the only reported incubation time for an ABLV infection in a Black Flying Fox (P. alecto) of 6-9 weeks (9). Incubation times after experimental infection of Vampire Bats with rabies were shorter at 7-26 days for intramuscular injection (10) or 2-4 weeks after subcutaneous or intramuscular injection (11).

Second, this report is the first to describe probable natural cross-species transmission. This finding has implications for our understanding of how the virus circulates in bat communities. Evidence of cross-species transmission is consistent with the minimal sequence variation in isolates from sick or injured flying foxes obtained from various species at different sites around Australia (1). The large seasonally nomadic, multispecies colonies in which flying foxes commonly congregate (and interact) provide opportunity for interspecies and interregion transmission of ABLV. Our findings support this model for circulation of ABLV in pteropid colonies.
Table 1. Bats positive for Australian bat lyssavirus infection

Species                         IFA positive (a)

Megachiroptera
Pteropodidae
Pteropus alecto                       6/50
Pteropus scapulatus                   0/18
Pteropus poliocephalus                1/8
Pteropus conspicillatus               0/4
Unidentified Pteropus                 l/5
Subtotal                              8/85
Microchiroptera
Hipposideridae
Hipposiderosater                      0/1
Molossidae
Mormopterus beccarii                  0/2
Mormopterus loriae                    0/2
Unidentified Mormopterus              0/2
Rhinolophidae
Rhinolophus philippinensis            0/1
Vespertilionidae
Chalinolobus gouldii                  0/1
Miniopterus australis                 0/3
Miniopterus schreibersii              0/1
Miniopterus scotorepens               0/1
Scotorepens orion                     0/1
Unidentified Scotorepens              0/1
Unidentified Vespertilionidae         0/14
Unidentified Microchiroptera          0/4
Subtotal                              0/34
Total                                8/119

(a) IFA, immunofluorescence assay; number positive/number tested.

Table 2. Nucleotide differences in the glycoprotein coding/noncoding
region of Australian bat lyssavirus (ABLV)

                                          Nucleotide (a)

Isolate host                 4701   4751   4899   4987   5037   5058

Pteropus alecto (b)           A      G      G      C      G      A
Pteropus poliocephalus (c)    A      G      G      C      G      A
Pteropus alecto (d)           C      A      A      T      A      G
Pteropus alecto (d)           C      A      G      T      A      G
Pteropus scapulatus (d)       C      A      G      T      A      G
Human (d)                     C      A      G      T      A      G
Pteropus alecto (e)           C      A      G      T      A      G

(a) Nucleotide position from the Ballina isolate of the pteropid
strain of ABLV (8); A, deoxyadenosine; C, deoxcytidine; G,
deoxyguanosine; T, thymidine.

(b) Case study, bat 1.

(c) Case study, bat 2.

(d) Queensland Health Scientific Services collection.

(e) From reference 8.


Acknowledgments

We acknowledge the expertise and dedication of Leanne Law and Lynette Hoskins for their care and daily monitoring of the quarantined colony and for their assistance with blood sample collections.

References

(1.) Hooper PT, Lunt RA, Gould AR, Samaratunga H, Hyatt AD, Gleeson LJ, et al. A new lyssavirus--the first endemic rabies related virus recognized in Australia. Bull Inst Pasteur 1997;95:209-18.

(2.) Hanlon CA, Niezgoda M, Morrill PA, Rupprecht CE. The incurable wound revisited: progress in human rabies prevention? Vaccine 2001;19:2273-9.

(3.) McCall BJ, Epstein JH, Neill AS, Heel K, Field H, Barrett J, et al. Potential exposure to Australian bat lyssavirus, Queensland, 1996-1999. Emerg Infect Dis 2000;6:259-64.

(4.) Churchill S. Pteropodidae. In: Australian bats. Sydney: New Holland Publishers; 1998. p. 72-93.

(5.) Smith IL, Northill JA, Harrower BJ, Smith GA. Development and evaluation of a fluorogenic based detection assay (TaqMan) for the detection of Australian Bat Lyssavirus. J Clin Virol;2002;25:285-91.

(6.) Heaton PR, Johnstone P, McElhinney LM, Roy C, O'Sullivan E, Whitby JE. Heminested PCR assay for detection of six genotypes of rabies and rabies-related viruses. J Clin Microbiol 1997;35:2762-6.

(7.) Churchill S. Keys to identification of bat families. In: Australian bats. Sydney: New Holland Publishers; 1998. p. 56-71.

(8.) Gould AR, Hyatt AD, Lunt R, Kattenbelt JA, Hengstberger S, Blacksell SD. Characterisation of a novel lyssavirus isolated from Pteropid bats in Australia. Virus Res 1998;54:165-87.

(9.) Field H, McCall B, Barrett J. Australian bat lyssavirus infection in a captive juvenile black flying fox. Emerg Infect Dis 1999;5:438-40.

(10.) Setien AA, Brochier B, Tordo N, De Paz O, Desmettre P, Peharpre D, et al. Experimental rabies infection and oral vaccination in vampire bats (Desmodus rotundus). Vaccine 1998;16:1122-6.

(11.) Moreno JA, Baer GM. Experimental rabies in the vampire bat. Am J Trop Med Hyg 1980;29:254-9.

Address for correspondence: David Warrilow, Queensland Health Scientific Services, PO Box 594 Archerfield, Queensland, 4108, Australia; fax: 61 7 3000 9186; e-mail: David_Warrilow@health.qld.gov.au

David Warrilow, * Bruce Harrower, * Ina L. Smith, * Hume Field, ([dagger]) Roscoe Taylor, ([double dagger]) Craig Walker, ([section]) and Greg A. Smith*

* Queensland Health Scientific Services, Archerfield, Queensland, Australia; ([dagger]) Queensland Department of Primary Industries, Moorooka, Queensland, Australia; ([double dagger]) Public Health Services health services Managed care The benefits covered under a health contract , Rockhampton, Queensland, Australia; and ([section]) Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service The Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service, or QPWS, is a sub-section of the Environmental Protection Agency within the Queensland government. Its primary concern is with the development and maintenance of national parks within Queensland. , Rockhampton, Queensland, Australia

Dr. Warrilow is a research scientist at the Public Health Virology Laboratory, Queensland Health Scientific Services. His research interests focus on novel approaches to viral antigen viral antigen
n. Abbr. VA
An antigen with multiple antigenicities that is protein in nature, strain-specific, and closely associated with the virus particle.
 production and therapeutic delivery. He is currently engaged in a project to establish a reverse genetics reverse genetics

methods such as antisense nucleic acids and site-directed mutagenesis that are used to selectively study gene function. Contrasts with classical genetics which depends on the isolation and analysis of cells (animals) with random mutations that can be identified.
 system for Australian bat lyssavirus and is also interested in the development of nucleic acid-based tests to detect viral diseases.
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Author:Smith, Greg A.
Publication:Emerging Infectious Diseases
Geographic Code:8AUST
Date:Feb 1, 2003
Words:2147
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