Viruses (Apr 2019)

First Evidence of Antibodies Against Lloviu Virus in Schreiber’s Bent-Winged Insectivorous Bats Demonstrate a Wide Circulation of the Virus in Spain

  • Eva Ramírez de Arellano,
  • Mariano Sanchez-Lockhart,
  • Maria J. Perteguer,
  • Maggie Bartlett,
  • Marta Ortiz,
  • Pamela Campioli,
  • Ana Hernández,
  • Jeanette Gonzalez,
  • Karla Garcia,
  • Manolo Ramos,
  • Miguel Ángel Jiménez-Clavero,
  • Antonio Tenorio,
  • Mª Paz Sánchez-Seco,
  • Félix González,
  • Juan Emilio Echevarría,
  • Gustavo Palacios,
  • Anabel Negredo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/v11040360
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 4
p. 360

Abstract

Read online

Although Lloviu virus (LLOV) was discovered in the carcasses of insectivorous Schreiber’s Bent-winged bats in the caves of Northern Spain in 2002, its infectivity and pathogenicity remain unclear. We examined the seroprevalence of LLOV in potentially exposed Schreiber’s Bent-winged bats (n = 60), common serotine bats (n = 10) as controls, and humans (n = 22) using an immunoblot assay. We found antibodies against LLOV GP2 in all of Schreiber’s Bent-winged bats serum pools, but not in any of the common serotine bats and human pools tested. To confirm this seroreactivity, 52 serums were individually tested using Domain Programmable Arrays (DPA), a phage display based-system serology technique for profiling filovirus epitopes. A serological signature against different LLOV proteins was obtained in 19/52 samples tested (36.5%). The immunodominant response was in the majority specific to LLOV-unique epitopes, confirming that the serological response detected was to LLOV. To our knowledge, this is the first serological evidence of LLOV exposure in live captured Schreiber’s Bent-winged bats, dissociating LLOV circulation as the cause of the previously reported die-offs.

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