Emerging Infectious Diseases (Sep 2019)
Bombali Virus in Mops condylurus Bats, Guinea
- Lyudmila S. Karan,
- Marat T. Makenov,
- Mikhail G. Korneev,
- Noumany Sacko,
- Sanaba Boumbaly,
- Sergey A. Yakovlev,
- Kerfalla Kourouma,
- Roman B. Bayandin,
- Anastasiya V. Gladysheva,
- Andrey V. Shipovalov,
- Irina A. Yurganova,
- Yana E. Grigorieva,
- Marina V. Fedorova,
- Svetlana A. Scherbakova,
- Vladimir V. Kutyrev,
- Alexander P. Agafonov,
- Renat A. Maksyutov,
- German A. Shipulin,
- Viktor V. Maleev,
- Mamadou Boiro,
- Vasiliy G. Akimkin,
- Anna Y. Popova
Affiliations
- Lyudmila S. Karan
- Marat T. Makenov
- Mikhail G. Korneev
- Noumany Sacko
- Sanaba Boumbaly
- Sergey A. Yakovlev
- Kerfalla Kourouma
- Roman B. Bayandin
- Anastasiya V. Gladysheva
- Andrey V. Shipovalov
- Irina A. Yurganova
- Yana E. Grigorieva
- Marina V. Fedorova
- Svetlana A. Scherbakova
- Vladimir V. Kutyrev
- Alexander P. Agafonov
- Renat A. Maksyutov
- German A. Shipulin
- Viktor V. Maleev
- Mamadou Boiro
- Vasiliy G. Akimkin
- Anna Y. Popova
- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2509.190581
- Journal volume & issue
-
Vol. 25,
no. 9
pp. 1774 – 1775
Abstract
In 2018, a previously unknown Ebola virus, Bombali virus, was discovered in Sierra Leone. We describe detection of Bombali virus in Guinea. We found viral RNA in internal organs of 3 Angolan free-tailed bats (Mops condylurus) trapped in the city of N’Zerekore and in a nearby village.
Keywords