Nipah Virus
INTRODUCTION
- Nipah virus (NiV) infection is a newly emerging zoonosis that causes severe disease in both animals and humans.
CLASSIFICATION
- Group: Group V (−)ssRNA)
- Order: Mononegavirales
- Family: Paramyxoviridae
- Genus: Henipavirus
NATURAL HOST
- Fruit bats of the Pteropodidae Family, Pteropus genus.
OUTBREAK
- NiV was first identified during an outbreak of disease that took place in Kampung Sungai Nipah, Malaysia in 1998.
- On this occasion, pigs were the intermediate hosts.
- However, in subsequent NiV outbreaks, there were no intermediate hosts.
- In 2001 West Bengal.
- In Bangladesh in 2004, humans became infected with NiV as a result of consuming date palm sap that had been contaminated by infected fruit bats
- In May 2018 Kerala, infection in humans with the NiV reported with the same cause as noticed in the year2004, in Bangladesh.
TRANSMISSION
- Infected bats shed virus in their excretion and secretions such as saliva, urine, semen and excreta .
- The NiV is highly contagious among pigs, spread by coughing.
- Humans contract infection via direct contact with infected pigs.
- Human-to-human transmission has also been documented, including in a hospital setting in India
BIOSAFETY LEVEL
- The Center of Disease Control (CDC) has declared it a biosafety level 4 agent.
- This is the highest biosafety level category, home to agents which can be distributed via aerosol transmission and have no treatment or vaccine.
- The availability, simplicity to produce and disperse, and high mortality rate of the Nipah virus make it possible for it to be used as a weapon of biological warfare.
MORPHOLOGY

- Pleomorphic
- Shape is varied, and traditionally 40 to 600 nm.
- Core of a virion contains a linear ribonucleoprotein comprising of negative-sense single-stranded RNA
- Also present in the RNP are three critically important proteins
- Nucleocapsid proteins are tightly bound to the various nucleotides of the RNA strand
- N protein is the most abundant protein present and necessary for capsid structure.
- Phosphoproteins
- Large polymerase proteins are also bound to the RNA
- The virion is enveloped by a traditional lipid bilayer but “spiked” with fusion and receptor-binding glycoproteins
- The fusion proteins are responsible for fusing the viral membrane to the host membrane triggering the release of the contents of the virion.
- The receptor-binding glycoproteins are extremely specific and bind only to Ephrin B2 (EFNB2) surface proteins
- Specifically, NiV has been found to alternatively bind to EFB3 as well.
- The EFNB2 surface proteins are highly conserved across the mammalian lineage
- On the underside of the lipid bilayer matrix proteins (M) are present for structural support and regulating the budding process.
- Other proteins, C, V, and W, are also present in the cytoplasm and involved in regulation of transcription and
VIRULENCE
- P gene encod for the C, V, and W proteins which play a role in the virulence of NiV
PATHOGENESIS
- Virion binds and fuses to the surface of a host cell via the F and G proteins.
- The lipid bi-layers are then melted and the viral nucleocapsid is released into the host cell.
- The negative sense viral RNA is transcribed to mRNA which acts as a template for more negative sense viral RNA.
- The viral RNA is used to make the necessary proteins (N,P,M,F,G,L,C,V,W) which congregate near the cell membrane.
- Once all the necessary proteins are assembled a new viral cell will bud off and infect other hosts
- The new viral cells are able to fuse together and create a huge multinucleated cell called syncytia
- A major difference between the reproduction of paramyxoviruses and influenza is that paramyxoviruses are strictly reproduced in the cytoplasm
CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS
Incubation Period
- In Pigs: varies but is usually short between 2 and 10 days.
- Human: 2 days to a month
Organ affected
- The Nipah virus primarily attacks the respiratory system, which is supported by the finding of high concentrations of viral antigens in the respiratory tract and lung epithelium
- Unlike Nipah virus infection in pigs, human infection is particularly encephalitic in nature.
Sign and Symptoms
- Fever
- Headache and drowsiness
- Confusion, disorientation
- Encephalitis
- Vasculitis
- Neurological deficits due to necrosis, thrombosis, and ischemia.
- The cerebrospinal fluid is also heavily impacted by an increase of proteins and dead cells present.
- The heavy encephalitic nature of NiV infection in humans also results in brain lesions, often times causing a relapse of encephalitis in patients who had recovered from NiV infection.
- Humans infected with NiV have a much higher fatality rate ranging from 40% to 75% depending on the location of the infection
DETECTION
- Isolation from tissue samples.
- In all species, NiV can be detected and isolated from the kidneys, cerebrospinal fluid, and the liver.
- Polymerase chain reaction, enzyme-linked immunosorbent, and immunofluorescence assays are also viable detection strategies
VACCINATION
- Currently, there are no vaccines or drugs which can cure or treat a NiV infection.
TREATMENT
- The primary approach is to treat the symptoms as best as possible in hope to control the infection.
- Patient is kept in ICU.
Exam Important
- Nipah virus (NiV) infection is a newly emerging zoonosis that causes severe disease in both animals and humans.
- Family: Paramyxoviridae
- Seen in India, outbreak 2001 West Bengal.
- Nipah virus is associated with epidemics of Encephalitis
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