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A new nairo-like virus associated with human febrile illness in China

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journal contribution
posted on 2021-06-17, 07:20 authored by Yan-Chun Wang, Zhengkai Wei, Xiaolong Lv, Shuzheng Han, Zedong Wang, Changfa Fan, Xu Zhang, Jianwei Shao, Ying-Hua Zhao, Liyan Sui, Chen Chen, Ming Liao, Bo Wang, Ningyi Jin, Chang Li, Jun Ma, Zhi-Jun Hou, Zhengtao Yang, Zhen Han, Yong Zhang, Junqi Niu, Wei Wang, Youchun Wang, Quan Liu

Several nairo-like viruses have been discovered in ticks in recent years, but their relevance to public health remains unknown. Here, we found a patient who had a history of tick bite and suffered from a febrile illness was infected with a previously discovered RNA virus, Beiji nairovirus (BJNV), in the nairo-like virus group of the order Bunyavirales. We isolated the virus by cell culture assay. BJNV could induce cytopathic effects in the baby hamster kidney and human hepatocellular carcinoma cells. Negative-stain electron microscopy revealed enveloped and spherical viral particles, morphologically similar to those of nairoviruses. We identified 67 patients as BJNV infection in 2017–2018. The median age of patients was 48 years (interquartile range 41–53 years); the median incubation period was 7 days (interquartile range 3–12 days). Most patients were men (70%), and a few (10%) had underlying diseases. Common symptoms of infected patients included fever (100%), headache (99%), depression (63%), coma (63%), and fatigue (54%), myalgia or arthralgia (45%); two (3%) patients became critically ill and one died. BJNV could cause growth retardation, viremia and histopathological changes in infected suckling mice. BJNV was also detected in sheep, cattle, and multiple tick species. These findings demonstrated that the newly discovered nairo-like virus may be associated with a febrile illness, with the potential vectors of ticks and reservoirs of sheep and cattle, highlighting its public health significance and necessity of further investigation in the tick-endemic areas worldwide.

Funding

This research was supported by the National Key Research and Development Program of China [grant number 2017YFD0501702] and the National Natural Science Foundation of China [grant numbers 82002165, 81972873].

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    Emerging Microbes and Infections

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