When Viruses Don't Go Viral: The Importance of Host Phylogeographic Structure in the Spatial Spread of Arenaviruses

PLoS Pathog. 2017 Jan 11;13(1):e1006073. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1006073. eCollection 2017 Jan.

Abstract

Many emerging infections are RNA virus spillovers from animal reservoirs. Reservoir identification is necessary for predicting the geographic extent of infection risk, but rarely are taxonomic levels below the animal species considered as reservoir, and only key circumstances in nature and methodology allow intrinsic virus-host associations to be distinguished from simple geographic (co-)isolation. We sampled and genetically characterized in detail a contact zone of two subtaxa of the rodent Mastomys natalensis in Tanzania. We find two distinct arenaviruses, Gairo and Morogoro virus, each spatially confined to a single M. natalensis subtaxon, only co-occurring at the contact zone's centre. Inter-subtaxon hybridization at this centre and a continuum of quality habitat for M. natalensis show that both viruses have the ecological opportunity to spread into the other substaxon's range, but do not, strongly suggesting host-intrinsic barriers. Such barriers could explain why human cases of another M. natalensis-borne arenavirus, Lassa virus, are limited to West Africa.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Arenavirus / classification*
  • Arenavirus / metabolism*
  • Arenavirus / physiology
  • Disease Reservoirs / virology*
  • Humans
  • Lassa Fever / virology
  • Lassa virus / physiology
  • Murinae / virology*
  • Phylogeography
  • Rodent Diseases / virology*
  • Species Specificity
  • Tanzania

Associated data

  • Dryad/10.5061/dryad.5n00k

Grants and funding

This work was supported by the Fund for Scientific Research–Flanders (FWO grant 1.5.264.12, K.2.209.10.N.01, 1167112N and GOA4815N); the University of Antwerp (GOA BOF FFB3567); the Czech Science Foundation (GACR grants P502/11/J070 and GACR 15-20229S, 14-35009S, 15-13265S); the German Research Foundation (DFG grant GU 883/2-1 GU 883/4-1 and LE 3111/1-1 – AOBJ: 600977); the VLIR-UOS Research Initiative Project (ZEIN2008RIP02) and by the Antwerp Study Centre for Infectious Diseases (ASCID). SG and BB were PhD fellows and JGdB a postdoctoral fellow with FWO during part of the work. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.