Assessing the risk of wild rodents as a potential source of emerging virus infections

Rodent-bourne viral zoonoses are a clinically significant group of viruses, however, their prevalence in the United Kingdom is not well-understood. Of particular importance are the Hantaviridae and the Picornaviridae. This thesis describes the screening of rodent tissue collected from four sites in...

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Main Author: Chappell, Joseph Graham
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/60734/
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author Chappell, Joseph Graham
author_facet Chappell, Joseph Graham
author_sort Chappell, Joseph Graham
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Rodent-bourne viral zoonoses are a clinically significant group of viruses, however, their prevalence in the United Kingdom is not well-understood. Of particular importance are the Hantaviridae and the Picornaviridae. This thesis describes the screening of rodent tissue collected from four sites in the United Kingdom, as well as sites in Poland and Egypt, for Orthohantaviruses, picornaviruses and orthobornaviruses. Two strains of Tatenale orthohantavirus were detected in field voles (M agrestis) captured at two sites in the United Kingdom. One of these viruses represents a novel strain and was detected in a location with no previous detection of Orthohantaviruses. Additionally, four species of picornaviruses were detected in Mus musculus, Rattus norvegicus and Myodes glareolus. Additional high-throughput sequencing recovered the first complete coding genome of Tatenale virus, which allowed characterisation of the genome and confirmed its status as a novel species. The serological screening of captive non-human primates for evidence of orthohantavirus infection showed evidence of both acute and past infections, which may have implications for the healthcare of these animals, and the conservation efforts of the species. Similarly, there was serological evidence of acute infection in vulnerable human cohorts, which has implications for the healthcare of these individuals and the local population. Finally, high-throughput sequencing of samples from humans with neurological disease of unknown aetiology, recovered evidence of human pegivirus infection in patients with neurological disease, a controversial and emerging topic in clinical virology currently.
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spelling nottingham-607342025-02-28T14:56:09Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/60734/ Assessing the risk of wild rodents as a potential source of emerging virus infections Chappell, Joseph Graham Rodent-bourne viral zoonoses are a clinically significant group of viruses, however, their prevalence in the United Kingdom is not well-understood. Of particular importance are the Hantaviridae and the Picornaviridae. This thesis describes the screening of rodent tissue collected from four sites in the United Kingdom, as well as sites in Poland and Egypt, for Orthohantaviruses, picornaviruses and orthobornaviruses. Two strains of Tatenale orthohantavirus were detected in field voles (M agrestis) captured at two sites in the United Kingdom. One of these viruses represents a novel strain and was detected in a location with no previous detection of Orthohantaviruses. Additionally, four species of picornaviruses were detected in Mus musculus, Rattus norvegicus and Myodes glareolus. Additional high-throughput sequencing recovered the first complete coding genome of Tatenale virus, which allowed characterisation of the genome and confirmed its status as a novel species. The serological screening of captive non-human primates for evidence of orthohantavirus infection showed evidence of both acute and past infections, which may have implications for the healthcare of these animals, and the conservation efforts of the species. Similarly, there was serological evidence of acute infection in vulnerable human cohorts, which has implications for the healthcare of these individuals and the local population. Finally, high-throughput sequencing of samples from humans with neurological disease of unknown aetiology, recovered evidence of human pegivirus infection in patients with neurological disease, a controversial and emerging topic in clinical virology currently. 2020-07-24 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/60734/1/4264686%20JChappell%20Thesis%20-%20Corrected.pdf Chappell, Joseph Graham (2020) Assessing the risk of wild rodents as a potential source of emerging virus infections. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Rodent-bourne viral zoonoses Hantaviridae Picornaviridae
spellingShingle Rodent-bourne viral zoonoses
Hantaviridae
Picornaviridae
Chappell, Joseph Graham
Assessing the risk of wild rodents as a potential source of emerging virus infections
title Assessing the risk of wild rodents as a potential source of emerging virus infections
title_full Assessing the risk of wild rodents as a potential source of emerging virus infections
title_fullStr Assessing the risk of wild rodents as a potential source of emerging virus infections
title_full_unstemmed Assessing the risk of wild rodents as a potential source of emerging virus infections
title_short Assessing the risk of wild rodents as a potential source of emerging virus infections
title_sort assessing the risk of wild rodents as a potential source of emerging virus infections
topic Rodent-bourne viral zoonoses
Hantaviridae
Picornaviridae
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/60734/