Cross-Continental Analysis of Vampire Bat Betaherpesvirus Reveals Limited Interference Among Strains and Local Geographic Spread
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Desmodus rotundus Betaherpesvirus (DrBHV) is a candidate vector for a transmissible vaccine targeting the circulation of rabies virus within its vampire bat reservoir. Studies assessing the potential for DrBHV as a vector have not considered its geographic range, potential for transboundary spread or how the diversity of wildtype DrBHV in natural bat populations might impede the spread of a modified vaccine strain. Here, by sequencing DrBHVs from vampire bats spanning 15 regions across 7 rabies-affected countries in Latin America and the Caribbean, we characterise the continent-scale distribution of DrBHV diversity and demonstrate widespread and apparently unconstrained co-infection. DrBHV occurred in all regions, forming a monophyletic clade consistent with a single introduction to vampire bats or host–virus co-speciation rather than frequent host switching. Phylogeographic analyses revealed cross-boundary spread that was predicted by geographic proximity. We identified 50 putative DrBHV strains and 79% of DrBHV-infected bats harboured multiple strains. No strains were over- or under-represented in co-infection and co-infections occurred proportionately to local strain prevalence. Whether strains circulated in given populations was predominantly driven by the geographic proximity of other populations containing that strain. The evolutionary relatedness of strains constrained neither rates of co-infection within individuals nor whether strains co-circulated within regions, suggesting vaccine vectors might be locally sourced rather than requiring imported, divergent strains to ameliorate interference. These results support the viability of DrBHV-vectored vaccines for mitigating rabies virus across Latin America and the Caribbean, despite widespread circulation of wildtype viruses.