Nature Communications (Jan 2020)

Isolation of Angola-like Marburg virus from Egyptian rousette bats from West Africa

  • Brian R. Amman,
  • Brian H. Bird,
  • Ibrahim A. Bakarr,
  • James Bangura,
  • Amy J. Schuh,
  • Jonathan Johnny,
  • Tara K. Sealy,
  • Immah Conteh,
  • Alusine H. Koroma,
  • Ibrahim Foday,
  • Emmanuel Amara,
  • Abdulai A. Bangura,
  • Aiah A. Gbakima,
  • Alexandre Tremeau-Bravard,
  • Manjunatha Belaganahalli,
  • Jasjeet Dhanota,
  • Andrew Chow,
  • Victoria Ontiveros,
  • Alexandra Gibson,
  • Joseph Turay,
  • Ketan Patel,
  • James Graziano,
  • Camilla Bangura,
  • Emmanuel S. Kamanda,
  • Augustus Osborne,
  • Emmanuel Saidu,
  • Jonathan Musa,
  • Doris Bangura,
  • Samuel Maxwell Tom Williams,
  • Richard Wadsworth,
  • Mohamed Turay,
  • Lavalie Edwin,
  • Vanessa Mereweather-Thompson,
  • Dickson Kargbo,
  • Fatmata V. Bairoh,
  • Marilyn Kanu,
  • Willie Robert,
  • Victor Lungai,
  • Raoul Emeric Guetiya Wadoum,
  • Moinya Coomber,
  • Osman Kanu,
  • Amara Jambai,
  • Sorie M. Kamara,
  • Celine H. Taboy,
  • Tushar Singh,
  • Jonna A. K. Mazet,
  • Stuart T. Nichol,
  • Tracey Goldstein,
  • Jonathan S. Towner,
  • Aiah Lebbie

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-14327-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Egyptian rousette bats (ERBs) are natural reservoirs for Marburg virus (MARV), but these bats have not been linked to the MARV Angola strain that caused the largest and deadliest outbreak on record. Here, Amman et al., in a multi-institutional surveillance effort, identify and isolate Angola-like MARV in ERBs in West Africa.