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The New Members of Filoviridae Family: Distribution, Natural Reservoirs, Potential Epidemic Danger
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
vestnik vojsk rhb zaŝity
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2587-5728
DOI - 10.35825/2587-5728-2019-3-4-329-336
Subject(s) - filoviridae , biology , genus , ebola virus , phylogenetic tree , virology , marburg virus , natural reservoir , zoology , evolutionary biology , outbreak , virus , genetics , gene , viral disease , paramyxoviridae
The purpose of the work is to analyze the distribution, natural reservoirs and potential epidemic hazard of new members of the Filoviridae family – Bombali viruses (genus Ebolavirus), Lloviu (genus Cuevavirus), Mengla (genus Dianlovirus), Xylang (genus Striavirus), and Hungjiao (genus Th amnovirus). New filoviruses were detected in Africa (Bombali virus), Europe (Llovi virus) and in Southeast Asia (Mengla, Xylang and Hungjiao viruses). Bats are a natural reservoir for all known fi loviruses. Th is fact is confi rmed by the information about the detection of genomic RNA and virus-specifi c antibodies in them. Th e isolation of the genomic RNA offi loviruses from bats with the subsequent sequencing and phylogenetic analysis made it possible to identify the Bombali, Lloviu, Mengla, Xylang and Hungjiao viruses as new representatives of the Filoviridae familyand to establish their position on the phylogenetic tree of the Filoviridae family. Despite the current lack of information about the isolation of biologically active virus from bats, as well as in spite of lack of establishedconnection between new fi loviruses and human diseases, the information that newly identifi ed fi loviruses use the same receptors (Neumann-Peak protein) to enter sensitive cells, as the Ebola and Marburg viruses, that arepathogenic for humans, the possible pathogenetic potential of new fi loviruses poses a great threat to people living in the territories, inhabited by bats. Th e possibility of the emergence of new emergent fi lovirus infections on the territory of Russia necessitates an in-depth study of bats as a natural reservoir of fi loviruses in nature

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