Open Access
Gut microbiota of bats: pro-mutagenic properties and possible frontiers in preventing emerging disease
Igor V. Popov
1
,
Maria S Mazanko
1, 2
,
Elizaveta D Kulaeva
2
,
Aleksey V. Malinovkin
2
,
Iraida S Aleshukina
3
,
Anna V Aleshukina
3
,
Evgeniya V Prazdnova
2
,
Tatiana I Tverdokhlebova
3
,
Michael L. Chikindas
1, 4, 5
,
2
3
Rostov Research Institute of Microbiology and Parasitology, Rostov-on-Don, Russian Federation
|
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2021-10-26
scimago Q1
wos Q1
SJR: 0.874
CiteScore: 6.7
Impact factor: 3.9
ISSN: 20452322
PubMed ID:
34702917
Multidisciplinary
Abstract
Bats are potential natural reservoirs for emerging viruses, causing deadly human diseases, such as COVID-19, MERS, SARS, Nipah, Hendra, and Ebola infections. The fundamental mechanisms by which bats are considered “living bioreactors” for emerging viruses are not fully understood. Some studies suggest that tolerance to viruses is linked to suppressing antiviral immune and inflammatory responses due to DNA damage by energy generated to fly. Our study reveals that bats' gut bacteria could also be involved in the host and its microbiota's DNA damage. We performed screening of lactic acid bacteria and bacilli isolated from bats' feces for mutagenic and oxidative activity by lux-biosensors. The pro-mutagenic activity was determined when expression of recA increased with the appearance of double-strand breaks in the cell DNA, while an increase of katG expression in the presence of hydroxyl radicals indicated antioxidant activity. We identified that most of the isolated bacteria have pro-mutagenic and antioxidant properties at the same time. This study reveals new insights into bat gut microbiota's potential involvement in antiviral response and opens new frontiers in preventing emerging diseases originating from bats.
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Total citations:
23
Citations from 2024:
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(60.87%)
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RIS |
BibTex
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GOST
Copy
Popov I. V. et al. Gut microbiota of bats: pro-mutagenic properties and possible frontiers in preventing emerging disease // Scientific Reports. 2021. Vol. 11. No. 1. 21075
GOST all authors (up to 50)
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Popov I. V., Mazanko M. S., Kulaeva E. D., Golovin S. N., Malinovkin A. V., Aleshukina I. S., Aleshukina A. V., Prazdnova E. V., Tverdokhlebova T. I., Chikindas M. L., Ermakov A. M. Gut microbiota of bats: pro-mutagenic properties and possible frontiers in preventing emerging disease // Scientific Reports. 2021. Vol. 11. No. 1. 21075
Cite this
RIS
Copy
TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1038/s41598-021-00604-z
UR - https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-00604-z
TI - Gut microbiota of bats: pro-mutagenic properties and possible frontiers in preventing emerging disease
T2 - Scientific Reports
AU - Popov, Igor V.
AU - Mazanko, Maria S
AU - Kulaeva, Elizaveta D
AU - Golovin, Sergey N.
AU - Malinovkin, Aleksey V.
AU - Aleshukina, Iraida S
AU - Aleshukina, Anna V
AU - Prazdnova, Evgeniya V
AU - Tverdokhlebova, Tatiana I
AU - Chikindas, Michael L.
AU - Ermakov, Alexey M.
PY - 2021
DA - 2021/10/26
PB - Springer Nature
IS - 1
VL - 11
PMID - 34702917
SN - 2045-2322
ER -
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BibTex (up to 50 authors)
Copy
@article{2021_Popov,
author = {Igor V. Popov and Maria S Mazanko and Elizaveta D Kulaeva and Sergey N. Golovin and Aleksey V. Malinovkin and Iraida S Aleshukina and Anna V Aleshukina and Evgeniya V Prazdnova and Tatiana I Tverdokhlebova and Michael L. Chikindas and Alexey M. Ermakov},
title = {Gut microbiota of bats: pro-mutagenic properties and possible frontiers in preventing emerging disease},
journal = {Scientific Reports},
year = {2021},
volume = {11},
publisher = {Springer Nature},
month = {oct},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-00604-z},
number = {1},
pages = {21075},
doi = {10.1038/s41598-021-00604-z}
}