Novel Hendra Virus Variant Detected by Sentinel Surveillance of Horses in Australia.

Edward J Annand, Bethany A Horsburgh, Kai Xu, Peter A Reid, Ben Poole, Maximillian C de Kantzow, Nicole Brown, Alison Tweedie, Michelle Michie, John D Grewar, Anne E Jackson, Nagendrakumar B Singanallur, Karren M Plain, Karan Kim, Mary Tachedjian, Brenda van der Heide, Sandra Crameri, David T Williams, Cristy Secombe, Eric D Laing, Spencer Sterling, Lianying Yan, Louise Jackson, Cheryl Jones, Raina K Plowright, Alison J Peel, Andrew C Breed, Ibrahim Diallo, Navneet K Dhand, Philip N Britton, Christopher C Broder, Ina Smith, John-Sebastian Eden
Author Information

Abstract

We identified and isolated a novel Hendra virus (HeV) variant not detected by routine testing from a horse in Queensland, Australia, that died from acute illness with signs consistent with HeV infection. Using whole-genome sequencing and phylogenetic analysis, we determined the variant had ≈83% nt identity with prototypic HeV. In silico and in vitro comparisons of the receptor-binding protein with prototypic HeV support that the human monoclonal antibody m102.4 used for postexposure prophylaxis and current equine vaccine will be effective against this variant. An updated quantitative PCR developed for routine surveillance resulted in subsequent case detection. Genetic sequence consistency with virus detected in grey-headed flying foxes suggests the variant circulates at least among this species. Studies are needed to determine infection kinetics, pathogenicity, reservoir-species associations, viral-host coevolution, and spillover dynamics for this virus. Surveillance and biosecurity practices should be updated to acknowledge HeV spillover risk across all regions frequented by flying foxes.

Keywords

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Grants

  1. U19 AI142764/NIAID NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Animals
Australia
Chiroptera
Hendra Virus
Henipavirus Infections
Horse Diseases
Horses
Phylogeny
Sentinel Surveillance

Word Cloud

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