CSIRO PhD student working at the highest level of biosecurity - biosecurity level 4 - at the Australian Animal Health Laboratory. Credit: CSIRO

CSIRO research into how bats can host some of the world鈥檚 deadliest viruses without suffering any ill-effects themselves will lead to improved strategies for controlling the spread of bat-borne diseases.

鈥淐SIRO is helping to safeguard the health of Australians and livestock through a comprehensive research program that examines how bats have adapted to co-exist with some of the most deadly viruses known,鈥 says the leader of a team of scientists at CSIRO's Australian Animal Health Laboratory (AAHL), in Geelong Victoria, Dr. Linfa Wang.

In an address today to more than 600 delegates at the 1st International One Health Congress in Melbourne, Dr. Wang said the aim is to better understand bat immunology and the bat virus-host interaction to identify strategies to control viruses such as Hendra spreading to other animals and people.

鈥淚n order to better control the spread of viruses like Hendra 鈥 from bats to horses and then on to people 鈥 it is becoming increasingly important to learn what governs the interactions between viruses and their hosts and, in particular, the phenomenon of 鈥榟ost switching鈥,鈥 Dr. Wang said.

鈥淭he term 鈥榟ost-switching鈥 is used to describe the situation where a virus spreads from an existing host to a 鈥榥ew鈥 host species.

鈥淚n some cases these host-switching events go unnoticed, as no disease develops in the new host, however in other situations the virus adapts to the new species and causes severe disease and in some cases death.鈥 

Bats are known to be a key source of viruses that have been involved in host-switching incidents 鈥 including Hendra, Ebola and SARS 鈥 and appear to have developed the ability to tolerate infections with these pathogens that are otherwise fatal when spread to other mammals.

appear to have some kind of 鈥榲iral radar鈥 鈥 a highly effective immune system which provides them with broad spectrum protection against viral attack,鈥 Dr. Wang said. 

鈥淥ur research will assist in developing faster, more sensitive surveillance tools that may radically change the risk management of zoonotic diseases within Australia and worldwide. 

鈥淭hat will mean we can move forward from just responding when an outbreak occurs, to putting pre-emergence surveillance and prevention strategies in place.鈥

Provided by CSIRO