Effect of Hantavirus Infection on the Rodent Lung Microbiome: Specific Regulatory Roles of Host Species and Virus Types
Yaru Xiong, Zhihui Dai, Fangling He, Rongjiao Liu, Juan Wang, Zhifei Zhan, Huayun Jia, Shengbao Chen, Liang Cai

TL;DR
This study explores how Hantavirus infection affects the lung microbiome in different rodent species, revealing that host species and virus type influence microbial community changes.
Contribution
The study identifies specific regulatory roles of host species and virus types in shaping the rodent lung microbiome during Hantavirus infection.
Findings
HTNV-infected Apodemus agrarius showed increased evenness but decreased microbial richness.
SEOV-infected Rattus norvegicus had no significant change in microbial richness compared to uninfected controls.
LEfSe analysis identified taxa like Streptococcus and Chlamydia associated with infection status in specific host-virus pairings.
Abstract
The lung-targeting characteristic of Hantavirus infection and the unclear mechanism underlying its interaction with the lung microbiome hampers the development of effective prevention and control strategies. In this study, lung tissues from Apodemus agrarius and Rattus norvegicus were collected at Hantavirus surveillance sites in Hunan Province. Metagenomic sequencing was subsequently applied to compare microbiome diversity, community structure, and function between infected and uninfected groups. Then the linear discriminant analysis effect size (LEfSe) was employed to identify key biomarkers. The results indicated that after infection with Hantaan virus (HTNV), Apodemus agrarius exhibited significantly increased evenness but markedly decreased richness of lung microbial communities, as reflected by consistent reductions in the number of observed species, Abundance-based Coverage…
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Taxonomy
TopicsViral Infections and Vectors · Respiratory viral infections research · Zoonotic diseases and public health
