- Author:
Fa Ming MIAO
1
;
Teng CHEN
1
;
Ye LIU
2
,
3
;
Shou Feng ZHANG
1
;
Fei ZHANG
1
;
Nan LI
1
;
Rong Liang HU
1
Author Information
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- MeSH: Animals; Brain; virology; China; epidemiology; Disease Reservoirs; veterinary; virology; Dog Diseases; epidemiology; transmission; virology; Dogs; Ferrets; virology; Genetic Linkage; Genetic Variation; Phylogeny; Phylogeography; Rabies; epidemiology; transmission; veterinary; virology; Rabies virus; genetics
- From: Biomedical and Environmental Sciences 2018;31(6):479-482
- CountryChina
- Language:English
- Abstract: Chinese ferret badger (FB)-transmitted rabies is a serious threat to public health in southeast China. Although mostly associated with dogs, the rabies virus (RABV) presents genetic diversity and has a significantly wide host range in China. Instead of the dog- and wildlife-associated China II lineage in the past decades, the China I lineage has become the main epidemic group hosted and transmitted by dogs. In this study, four new lineages, including 43 RABVs from FBs, have been classified within the dog-dominated China I lineage since 2014. FB RABVs have been previously categorized in the China II lineage. Moreover, FB-hosted viruses seem to have become the main independent FB-associated clade in the phylogenetic tree. This claim suggests that the increasing genetic diversity of RABVs in FBs is a result of the selective pressure from coexisting dog rabies. FB transmission has become complicated and serious with the coexistence of dog rabies. Therefore, apart from targeting FB rabies, priority should be provided by the appropriate state agencies to perform mass immunization of dog against rabies.