Bats as Viral Hosts and Zoonotic Disease Prevention

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Bats as Viral Hosts and Zoonotic Disease Prevention
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Bats as Viral Hosts and Zoonotic Disease Prevention

Context:

Studies suggest bats are special viral reservoirs with the most virulent zoonotic viruses. The creatures harbour a vast array of viruses, some of which cause deadly diseases in humans.

 

Bats: Viable Viral Hosts:

  • Bats harbour numerous viruses, some deadly to humans, yet rarely fall ill.
  • Bats live in colonies, promoting easy virus transmission.
  • Bats can survive high viral loads without showing clinical disease.
  • Bats’ antiviral properties likely select for high growth rate viruses, which can be pathogenic in other hosts.
      • High viral loads and anti-inflammatory phenotype allow bats to transmit viruses efficiently.

 

Bats as Viral Hosts and Zoonotic Disease Prevention

 

Adaptations for Flight, Viral Tolerance, and Coexistence:

  • Flight requires significant metabolic effort, leading to unique adaptations in bats:
      • Dampened recognition of cellular damage, Unique anti-inflammatory phenotype, Enhanced DNA damage repair pathways.
  • These adaptations also help bats resist and tolerate viral infections.
  • Bats immune adaptations for flight aid in viral tolerance and longevity.
  • Bats balance viral tolerance with strong antiviral responses.
  • Bats host thousands of viruses, including those causing human diseases like Nipah, Marburg, rabies, and SARS-like viruses.

 

Zoonotic diseases: 

  • The infections that are spread between people and animals
  • These infections are caused by germs, such as viruses, bacteria, parasites, and fungi.

 

Spillover and Human Transmission:

  • Bat-borne viruses are less likely to establish sustained human transmission due to phylogenetic distance.
  • Viruses from hosts closer to humans, like primates, have higher potential for endemic establishment.
  • Human activities, such as deforestation and climate change, increase spillover risks.
  • Intermediate hosts (e.g., dogs, pigs, horses) often play a role before bat-borne viruses infect humans.

 

Importance of Conservation and Studying Bat-Borne Viruses:

  • Understanding bat virus transmission aids in early intervention to prevent spillover, research on fruit bats in Madagascar provides insights into virus movement and bat immune responses.
  • Discovering new henipaviruses helps develop preventive measures like multivalent vaccines.
  • Bats face population decline due to white nose syndrome and climate change.
  • Negative perceptions hinder bat conservation efforts.
  • Bats are essential for ecosystems, including pollination and insect control.
  • Studying bats provides insights for combating viruses, advancing human health, and understanding bat immune systems, cancer resistance, and longevity, offering valuable knowledge for human health.

 

Bats as Viral Hosts and Zoonotic Disease Prevention

 

Interesting Facts About Bats:

  • Bats are the only flying mammals.
  • Baby bats are called pups, a group of bats is a colony.
  • Bat droppings, high in potassium nitrate (saltpeter), can be used to make gunpowder and fertiliser.
  • Only smaller bats use echolocation, bigger bats have better vision than humans.
  • Without bats, we would lose bananas, avocados, and mangoes.

 

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