Publication details

White-nose syndrome without borders: Pseudogymnoascus destructans infection tolerated in Europe and Palearctic Asia but not in North America

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Authors

ZUKAL Jan BANDOUCHOVA Hana BRICHTA Jiri CMOKOVA Adela JARON Kamil S. KOLARIK Miroslav KOVACOVA Veronika KUBÁTOVÁ Alena NOVÁKOVÁ Alena ORLOV Oleg PIKULA Jiri PRESETNIK Primož ŠUBA Jurgis ZAHRADNÍKOVÁ JR. Alexandra MARTÍNKOVÁ Natália

Year of publication 2016
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Scientific Reports
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Science

Citation
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep19829
Field Zoology
Keywords NIPAH VIRUS-INFECTION; GEOMYCES-DESTRUCTANS; UNITED-STATES; ZOONOTIC VIRUSES; EMERGING DISEASE; HIBERNATING BATS; CAUSATIVE AGENT; SYNDROME FUNGUS; SPREAD; HIBERNACULA
Description A striking feature of white-nose syndrome, a fungal infection of hibernating bats, is the difference in infection outcome between North America and Europe. Here we show high WNS prevalence both in Europe and on the West Siberian Plain in Asia. Palearctic bat communities tolerate similar fungal loads of Pseudogymnoascus destructans infection as their Nearctic counterparts and histopathology indicates equal focal skin tissue invasiveness pathognomonic for WNS lesions. Fungal load positively correlates with disease intensity and it reaches highest values at intermediate latitudes. Prevalence and fungal load dynamics in Palearctic bats remained persistent and high between 2012 and 2014. Dominant haplotypes of five genes are widespread in North America, Europe and Asia, expanding the source region of white-nose syndrome to non-European hibernacula. Our data provides evidence for both endemicity and tolerance to this persistent virulent fungus in the Palearctic, suggesting that host-pathogen interaction equilibrium has been established.
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