Viruses (Oct 2021)

Incursion of European Bat Lyssavirus 1 (EBLV-1) in Serotine Bats in the United Kingdom

  • Arran J. Folly,
  • Denise A. Marston,
  • Megan Golding,
  • Shweta Shukla,
  • Rebekah Wilkie,
  • Fabian Z. X. Lean,
  • Alejandro Núñez,
  • Lisa Worledge,
  • James Aegerter,
  • Ashley C. Banyard,
  • Anthony R. Fooks,
  • Nicholas Johnson,
  • Lorraine M. McElhinney

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/v13101979
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 10
p. 1979

Abstract

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Lyssaviruses are an important genus of zoonotic viruses which cause the disease rabies. The United Kingdom is free of classical rabies (RABV). However, bat rabies due to European bat lyssavirus 2 (EBLV-2), has been detected in Daubenton’s bats (Myotis daubentonii) in Great Britain since 1996, including a fatal human case in Scotland in 2002. Across Europe, European bat lyssavirus 1 (EBLV-1) is commonly associated with serotine bats (Eptesicus serotinus). Despite the presence of serotine bats across large parts of southern England, EBLV-1 had not previously been detected in this population. However, in 2018, EBLV-1 was detected through passive surveillance in a serotine bat from Dorset, England, using a combination of fluorescent antibody test, reverse transcription-PCR, Sanger sequencing and immunohistochemical analysis. Subsequent EBLV-1 positive serotine bats have been identified in South West England, again through passive surveillance, during 2018, 2019 and 2020. Here, we confirm details of seven cases of EBLV-1 and present similarities in genetic sequence indicating that emergence of EBLV-1 is likely to be recent, potentially associated with the natural movement of bats from the near continent

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