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Volume 16, Number 12—December 2010
Dispatch

Characterization of Nipah Virus from Naturally Infected Pteropus vampyrus Bats, Malaysia

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Author affiliations: Author affiliations: Veterinary Research Institute, Ipoh, Malaysia (S.A. Rahman, S.A. Shohaimi, Z.C. Mamat, M.S. Naim); Monash University, Selangor, Malaysia (S.S. Hassan); EcoHealth Alliance, New York, New York, USA (K.J. Olival, J.H. Epstein, P. Daszak); University of Science Malaysia, Kelantan, Malaysia (M. Mohamed); University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia (L.-Y. Chang); University Putra Malaysia, Serdang, Selangor (L. Hassan, A.S. Suri); Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation, Putrajaya, Malaysia (N.M. Saad); Queensland Primary Industries and Fisheries, Moorooka, Queensland, Australia (H.E. Field)

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Abstract

We isolated and characterized Nipah virus (NiV) from Pteropus vampyrus bats, the putative reservoir for the 1998 outbreak in Malaysia, and provide evidence of viral recrudescence. This isolate is monophyletic with previous NiVs in combined analysis, and the nucleocapsid gene phylogeny suggests that similar strains of NiV are co-circulating in sympatric reservoir species.

Nipah virus (NiV) first emerged in Malaysia in 1998 (1), with subsequent human cases reported in Bangladesh (2) and India (3). Serologic and virologic evidence support the hypothesis that Pteropus spp. bats are the reservoir hosts for henipaviruses (4,5). However, the mechanisms of transmission between individual bats and of viral maintenance in a colony are poorly understood. We report isolation of NiV from Pteropus vampyrus bats, the putative reservoir for the 1998 outbreak in humans and pigs, and present evidence that these bats can harbor latent infections that recrudesce. Finally, we characterized this isolate and compared its phylogenetic position with all other known henipavirus sequences.

The Study

We conducted a prospective cohort study from June 2004 through June 2005 on a group of 17 P. vampyrus flying foxes captured in 2 locations, using a nonrandom sampling method. Fourteen bats (73%) were from Lenggong (5°07′01.1′′N, 100°58′32.7′′E), and 3 bats (27%) were from Kampung Gajah (4°10′35′′N, 100°55′37′′E), Malaysia. This project was approved by the Wildlife Trust Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee, New York, New York, USA, and Department of Wildlife and National Park Malaysia research committee.

Because bats were included in the study in a staggered manner, each bat was monitored for antibody titer against NiV and virus excretion for 5 to 12 months. Bats were quarantined at Taiping Zoo (4°54′N, 100°45′E), Taiping, Malaysia, in a wire net (1 inch square) enclosure, 5 m long × 4 m wide × 3 m high; with a roof and cement floor. Inactivated bat serum specimens were screened for NiV antibodies by using a serum neutralization test. A titer of >8 was considered positive for specific antibodies against NiV, because bat serum is frequently toxic to Vero cells at higher concentrations (i.e., 1:2 or 1:4). A 4-fold increase in antibody titer was interpreted as an indication of an acute or recent infection (6). Seroreaction of juvenile bats was considered to represent NiV maternal antibody remnants.

During the study, 544 samples were cultured for virus isolation (272 throat and 272 urine or urogenital swab specimens). Samples were added to Vero cells (CRL 81; American Type Culture Collection, Manasssas VA, USA) and observed for characteristic syncytial type of cytopathic effects (1). NiV was isolated from only 1 sample, the urine of an adult female bat (no. 24). The antibody profile of this bat showed an antibody titer of 8 when tested on entry to the study, which later waned to negative (titer <4) on the second sampling. The bat remained antibody negative for 11 months, after which the bat again become seropositive; the titer rose from <4 to 32 over a 3-week period.

Virus isolation corresponded to the time when the antibody titer of the bat was on the verge of rising (<4 to 4). Two weeks later, 2 seronegative male bats (nos. 38 and 48) converted to a titer of 32; however, no virus was isolated. Details from our longitudinal serologic testing of these 3 bats are shown in Table 1. The isolation from bat no. 24 was confirmed as NiV as described (7). Serum neutralization test and virus isolation were performed in a BioSafety Level 3 Laboratory at Veterinary Research Institute, Ipoh, Malaysia.

The sequence of NiV P. vampyrus (GenBank accession no. FN869553) and the alignment analysis show that NiV P. vampyrus differs from all known isolates from Malaysia at 98 nt positions; these nucleotide changes translated into amino acid changes at 44 positions. Subsequent analysis of the deduced amino acid sequences of the open reading frames of the nucleocapsid, phosphoprotein, matrix, fusion, attachment, and polymerase genes showed high sequence similarities (98%–99%) between nucleocapsid, matrix, fusion, attachment, and polymerase proteins of NiV P. vampyrus and other previously sequenced NiV isolates from Malyasia. However, phosphoprotein shares the lowest homology (96%). Table 2 shows a summary of the specific deduced amino acid changes compared with other NiV sequences.

Figure 1

Thumbnail of Phylogenetic position of Nipah virus (NiV) isolate from Pteropus vampyrus bats (box) in combined analysis of nucleocapsid, phosphoprotein, matrix, fusion, and attachment gene open reading frames (8.3 kb). Maximum likelihood tree, general time reversible + Γ model, 1,000 bootstrap replicates. NiV P. vampyrus is distinct but forms a clade with other NiV sequences from Malaysia, and the isolate from Bangladesh is more distantly related and basal to this group. GenBank accession numbers

Figure 1. Phylogenetic position of Nipah virus (NiV) isolate from Pteropus vampyrus bats (box) in combined analysis of nucleocapsid, phosphoprotein, matrix, fusion, and attachment gene open reading frames (8.3 kb). Maximum likelihood tree,...

Figure 2

Thumbnail of Partial nucleocapsid gene (358 bp) maximum-likelihood tree for all available Nipah virus (NiV) sequences (seqs) in GenBank, showing a high level of NiV sequence diversity in Pteropus lylei bat isolates from Thailand. NiV P. vampyrus  (box) is most closely related to AY858110 from P. lylei bats and forms a large clade that includes other P. lylei bat isolates and all NiV sequences from Malaysia. GenBank accession numbers are given for NiV isolates from pigs in Malaysia (AJ627196, Tam

Figure 2. Partial nucleocapsid gene (358 bp) maximum-likelihood tree for all available Nipah virus (NiV) sequences (seqs) in GenBank, showing a high level of NiV sequence diversity in Pteropus lylei bat isolates from...

Phylogenetic analyses were generated by using maximum-likelihood methods (8). Sequences were analyzed with henipavirus sequences available in GenBank. The analysis of the combined nucleotide dataset shows that NiV P. vampyrus forms a monophyletic clade with other NiV isolates from Malaysia, yet it differs from human, pig, and P. hypomelanus bat isolates. NiV from humans in Bangladesh is more distantly related and basal to all NiV sequences from Malaysia (Figure 1). This relationship is further supported by the polymerase gene analysis (data not shown). When the nucleocapsid gene alone was analyzed, including 56 NiV sequences from P. lylei bats in Thailand, NiV P. vampyrus phylogenetically grouped most closely with NiV P. lylei (AY858110), and the monophyly of NiV sequences from Malysia was lost (Figure 2). This sister relationship between NiV P. lylei and NiV P. vampryus is also evident in analysis of the atttachment gene (data not shown).

Conclusions

Our evidence suggests that NiV can recrudesce in previously infected adult bats, thus providing a new potential mechanism for maintenance in natural hosts. We isolated NiV from a seropositive adult bat at the time of capture, and therefore it was unlikely to have had remnant maternal antibodies. Also, it is unlikely that infection could have been introduced by other wild bats because other bats could not access the enclosure where the study bats were kept. The antibodies waned during the bat’s captivity, and subsequent seroconversion correlated with our finding of NiV in the individual bat’s urine. The bats were isolated from contact with wild bats, and all other bats placed in the colony were negative for henipavirus by culture; only bats 24, 38, and 48 subsequently seroconverted. Recrudescence of NiV infection in bats is not completely unexpected because NiV infection has resulted in (fatal) relapsing illness in humans, several months to 4 years after initial exposure (9). Other paramyxoviruses, including canine distemper (10) and measles virus (11), can persist in tissues for some years.

The seroconversion of the 3 bats in this colony is consistent with recent viral challenge (6) and a scenario in which bat 24 underwent recrudescence of a latent infection. The seroconversion supports the conclusion that bats 38 and 48 were infected through exposure to urine, feces, or saliva from bat 24.

NiV was not isolated from the 2 male bats, which may have been because of a low amount of virus excreted, a very narrow time frame for excretion, or both; however, these findings suggest that they did not undergo recrudescence. Evidence for NiV recrudescence adds to our understanding of henipavirus ecology and transmission dynamics. Repeated shedding of NiV through recrudescence may enhance viral maintenance in isolated colonies without the boom and bust dynamics, typical of acute viral infections with long-term immunity and reduce the necessity of intercolony migration for maintenance.

Our phylogenetic analyses help address some long-standing questions regarding the natural history of henipaviruses (12). Close homology between NiV P. vampyrus and a NiV P. lylei isolates and evidence from nucleocapsid and polymerase gene analysis suggest that NiV is naturally transmitted between these 2 species, which roost together in Thailand and parts of Cambodia. Furthermore, NiV diversity in isolates obtained from P. lylei bats demonstrates that multiple strains co-circulate within populations and that the ecology and sympatry of Pteropus spp., not co-evolutionary patterns, determine NiV strain diversity in reservoir hosts.

During the 1998 outbreak, NiV isolates from P. hypomelanus bats was found to be nearly identical to those from pigs and humans (5­6 nt changes) (13,14). However, this species is only found on offshore islands, has limited dispersal, and does not overlap with the index farms. Thus, P. vampyrus bats are likely the putative spillover hosts in Malaysia, not P. hypomelanus bats; nonetheless, our isolate differed markedly from others in the outbreak. Because laboratory contamination of the NiV P. hypomelanus isolate seems unlikely (14), the co-circulation of multiple strains in P. vampyrus bats is probable. Alternatively, the differences we observed in NiV P. vampyrus may be the result of rapid RNA virus evolution during the 7-year period between sampling of NiV P. vampyrus (2005) and sampling of the other isolates from Malaysia (1998–1999). Our data support this hypothesis. Assuming a known henipavirus genome length of ≈18,000 nt (15), the average substitution rate for Paramyxoviridae of 0.50 × 10–3 substitutions/site/year, and a constant molecular clock, the 98-nt changes observed correspond broadly to the time frame (≈7 years) between sampling of these isolates.

Dr Rahman is a senior veterinary epidemiologist with the Veterinary Research Institute, Malaysia. Her primary research interest is the ecology of emerging and reemerging diseases carried by wildlife, especially by bats and rodents.

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Acknowledgments

We thank the director general of Veterinary Services, Malaysia, for logistical support; the Department of Wildlife and National Parks, Malaysia, for guidance and permission to sample wild bats; and Zoo Taiping and Night Safari, Taiping, for use of their facilities.

This work was supported in part by internal funding of the Veterinary Research Institute and a National Institutes of Health/National Science Foundation “Ecology of Infectious Diseases” award from the John E. Fogarty International Center (2R01-TW005869).

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References

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Cite This Article

DOI: 10.3201/eid1612.091790

1Members of the Henipavirus Ecology Research Group are listed on the group’s website (www.henipavirus.org/staff/Staff.htm).

Table of Contents – Volume 16, Number 12—December 2010

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Sohayati A. Rahman, Veterinary Research Institute, 59 Jalan Sultan Azlan Shah, 31400 Ipoh Perak, Malaysia

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Page created: August 28, 2011
Page updated: August 28, 2011
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