Viruses (May 2020)

Detection of Recombinant Rousettus Bat Coronavirus GCCDC1 in Lesser Dawn Bats (<i>Eonycteris spelaea</i>) in Singapore

  • Adrian C. Paskey,
  • Justin H. J. Ng,
  • Gregory K. Rice,
  • Wan Ni Chia,
  • Casandra W. Philipson,
  • Randy J.H. Foo,
  • Regina Z. Cer,
  • Kyle A. Long,
  • Matthew R. Lueder,
  • Xiao Fang Lim,
  • Kenneth G. Frey,
  • Theron Hamilton,
  • Danielle E. Anderson,
  • Eric D. Laing,
  • Ian H. Mendenhall,
  • Gavin J. Smith,
  • Lin-Fa Wang,
  • Kimberly A. Bishop-Lilly

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/v12050539
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 5
p. 539

Abstract

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Rousettus bat coronavirus GCCDC1 (RoBat-CoV GCCDC1) is a cross-family recombinant coronavirus that has previously only been reported in wild-caught bats in Yúnnan, China. We report the persistence of a related strain in a captive colony of lesser dawn bats captured in Singapore. Genomic evidence of the virus was detected using targeted enrichment sequencing, and further investigated using deeper, unbiased high throughput sequencing. RoBat-CoV GCCDC1 Singapore shared 96.52% similarity with RoBat-CoV GCCDC1 356 (NC_030886) at the nucleotide level, and had a high prevalence in the captive bat colony. It was detected at five out of six sampling time points across the course of 18 months. A partial segment 1 from an ancestral Pteropine orthoreovirus, p10, makes up the recombinant portion of the virus, which shares high similarity with previously reported RoBat-CoV GCCDC1 strains that were detected in Yúnnan, China. RoBat-CoV GCCDC1 is an intriguing, cross-family recombinant virus, with a geographical range that expands farther than was previously known. The discovery of RoBat-CoV GCCDC1 in Singapore indicates that this recombinant coronavirus exists in a broad geographical range, and can persist in bat colonies long-term.

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