featured-image

THURSDAY, Oct. 31, 2024 (HealthDay News) -- When a black cat named Pepper dropped a dead mouse on the carpet at his owner's feet on a day back in May 2021, neither of them knew then that it would alert scientists to the arrival of an exotic virus to the United States. Pepper is a skilled hunter who regularly leaves “gifts” for his humans, so that part wasn't surprising.

But owner John Lednicky , a microbiologist with the University of Florida (UF) in Gainesville, did suspect the mouse might be carrying a virus called deer mulepox . Instead, lab tests showed the mouse was harboring the first jeilongvirus to be discovered in the United States, researchers reported recently in the journal Pathogens . Worse, it was a genetically mutated form of jeilongvirus, a type of virus previously detected in Africa, Asia, Europe and South America, Lednicky said.



“It grows equally well in rodent, human and nonhuman primate [monkey] cells, making it a great candidate for a spillover event” that could lead to a human epidemic or pandemic, Lednicky said in a university news release. Jeilingoviruses infect mammals, reptiles, birds and fish, and can occasionally cause serious illness in humans, Lednicky explained. They are a type of paramyxovirus, which are associated with respiratory infections.

“We were not anticipating a virus of this sort, and the discovery reflects the realization that many viruses that we don’t know about circulate in animals that live in close proximity to human.

Back to Health Page