Veronika Kovacova
University of Veterinary and Pharmaceutical Sciences Brno
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Publication
Featured researches published by Veronika Kovacova.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Jan Zukal; Hana Bandouchova; Tomáš Bartonička; Hana Berková; Virgil Brack; Jiri Brichta; Matej Dolinay; Kamil S. Jaron; Veronika Kovacova; Miroslav Kovarik; Natália Martínková; K. Ondracek; Zdenek Rehak; Gregory G. Turner; Jiri Pikula
Host traits and phylogeny can determine infection risk by driving pathogen transmission and its ability to infect new hosts. Predicting such risks is critical when designing disease mitigation strategies, and especially as regards wildlife, where intensive management is often advocated or prevented by economic and/or practical reasons. We investigated Pseudogymnoascus [Geomyces] destructans infection, the cause of white-nose syndrome (WNS), in relation to chiropteran ecology, behaviour and phylogenetics. While this fungus has caused devastating declines in North American bat populations, there have been no apparent population changes attributable to the disease in Europe. We screened 276 bats of 15 species from hibernacula in the Czech Republic over 2012 and 2013, and provided histopathological evidence for 11 European species positive for WNS. With the exception of Myotis myotis, the other ten species are all new reports for WNS in Europe. Of these, M. emarginatus, Eptesicus nilssonii, Rhinolophus hipposideros, Barbastella barbastellus and Plecotus auritus are new to the list of P. destructans-infected bat species. While the infected species are all statistically phylogenetically related, WNS affects bats from two suborders. These are ecologically diverse and adopt a wide range of hibernating strategies. Occurrence of WNS in distantly related bat species with diverse ecology suggests that the pathogen may be a generalist and that all bats hibernating within the distribution range of P. destructans may be at risk of infection.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Jan Zukal; Hana Bandouchova; Jiri Brichta; Adela Cmokova; Kamil S. Jaron; Miroslav Kolarik; Veronika Kovacova; Alena Kubátová; Alena Nováková; Oleg Orlov; Jiri Pikula; Primož Presetnik; Jurģis Šuba; Alexandra Zahradníková; Natália Martínková
A striking feature of white-nose syndrome, a fungal infection of hibernating bats, is the difference in infection outcome between North America and Europe. Here we show high WNS prevalence both in Europe and on the West Siberian Plain in Asia. Palearctic bat communities tolerate similar fungal loads of Pseudogymnoascus destructans infection as their Nearctic counterparts and histopathology indicates equal focal skin tissue invasiveness pathognomonic for WNS lesions. Fungal load positively correlates with disease intensity and it reaches highest values at intermediate latitudes. Prevalence and fungal load dynamics in Palearctic bats remained persistent and high between 2012 and 2014. Dominant haplotypes of five genes are widespread in North America, Europe and Asia, expanding the source region of white-nose syndrome to non-European hibernacula. Our data provides evidence for both endemicity and tolerance to this persistent virulent fungus in the Palearctic, suggesting that host-pathogen interaction equilibrium has been established.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Miroslav Flieger; Hana Bandouchova; Jan Cerny; Milada Chudíčková; Miroslav Kolarik; Veronika Kovacova; Natália Martínková; Petr Novák; Ondřej Šebesta; Eva Stodůlková; Jiri Pikula
Pathogenic and non-pathogenic related microorganisms differ in secondary metabolite production. Here we show that riboflavin overproduction by a fungal pathogen and its hyperaccumulation in affected host tissue exacerbates a skin infection to necrosis. In white-nose syndrome (WNS) skin lesions caused by Pseudogymnoascus destructans, maximum riboflavin concentrations reached up to 815 μg ml−1, indicating bioaccumulation and lack of excretion. We found that high riboflavin concentrations are cytotoxic under conditions specific for hibernation, affect bats’ primary fibroblasts and induce cell detachment, loss of mitochondrial membrane potential, polymerization of cortical actin, and cell necrosis. Our results explain molecular pathology of WNS, where a skin infection becomes fatal. Hyperaccumulation of vitamin B2 coupled with reduced metabolism and low tissue oxygen saturation during hibernation prevents removal of excess riboflavin in infected bats. Upon reperfusion, oxygen reacts with riboflavin resulting in dramatic pathology after arousal. While multiple molecules enable invasive infection, riboflavin-associated extensive necrosis likely contributes to pathophysiology and altered arousal pattern in infected bats. Bioaccumulation of a vitamin under natural infection represents a novel condition in a complex host-pathogen interplay.
PLOS ONE | 2017
Jiri Pikula; Sybill K. Amelon; Hana Bandouchova; Tomáš Bartonička; Hana Berková; Jiri Brichta; Sarah Hooper; Tomasz Kokurewicz; Miroslav Kolarik; Bernd Köllner; Veronika Kovacova; Petr Linhart; Vladimir Piacek; Gregory G. Turner; Jan Zukal; Natália Martínková
While white-nose syndrome (WNS) has decimated hibernating bat populations in the Nearctic, species from the Palearctic appear to cope better with the fungal skin infection causing WNS. This has encouraged multiple hypotheses on the mechanisms leading to differential survival of species exposed to the same pathogen. To facilitate intercontinental comparisons, we proposed a novel pathogenesis-based grading scheme consistent with WNS diagnosis histopathology criteria. UV light-guided collection was used to obtain single biopsies from Nearctic and Palearctic bat wing membranes non-lethally. The proposed scheme scores eleven grades associated with WNS on histopathology. Given weights reflective of grade severity, the sum of findings from an individual results in weighted cumulative WNS pathology score. The probability of finding fungal skin colonisation and single, multiple or confluent cupping erosions increased with increase in Pseudogymnoascus destructans load. Increasing fungal load mimicked progression of skin infection from epidermal surface colonisation to deep dermal invasion. Similarly, the number of UV-fluorescent lesions increased with increasing weighted cumulative WNS pathology score, demonstrating congruence between WNS-associated tissue damage and extent of UV fluorescence. In a case report, we demonstrated that UV-fluorescence disappears within two weeks of euthermy. Change in fluorescence was coupled with a reduction in weighted cumulative WNS pathology score, whereby both methods lost diagnostic utility. While weighted cumulative WNS pathology scores were greater in the Nearctic than Palearctic, values for Nearctic bats were within the range of those for Palearctic species. Accumulation of wing damage probably influences mortality in affected bats, as demonstrated by a fatal case of Myotis daubentonii with natural WNS infection and healing in Myotis myotis. The proposed semi-quantitative pathology score provided good agreement between experienced raters, showing it to be a powerful and widely applicable tool for defining WNS severity.
Scientific Reports | 2018
Hana Bandouchova; Tomáš Bartonička; Hana Berková; Jiri Brichta; Tomasz Kokurewicz; Veronika Kovacova; Petr Linhart; Vladimir Piacek; Jiri Pikula; Alexandra Zahradníková; Jan Zukal
In underground hibernacula temperate northern hemisphere bats are exposed to Pseudogymnoascus destructans, the fungal agent of white-nose syndrome. While pathological and epidemiological data suggest that Palearctic bats tolerate this infection, we lack knowledge about bat health under pathogen pressure. Here we report blood profiles, along with body mass index (BMI), infection intensity and hibernation temperature, in greater mouse-eared bats (Myotis myotis). We sampled three European hibernacula that differ in geomorphology and microclimatic conditions. Skin lesion counts differed between contralateral wings of a bat, suggesting variable exposure to the fungus. Analysis of blood parameters suggests a threshold of ca. 300 skin lesions on both wings, combined with poor hibernation conditions, may distinguish healthy bats from those with homeostatic disruption. Physiological effects manifested as mild metabolic acidosis, decreased glucose and peripheral blood eosinophilia which were strongly locality-dependent. Hibernating bats displaying blood homeostasis disruption had 2 °C lower body surface temperatures. A shallow BMI loss slope with increasing pathogen load suggested a high degree of infection tolerance. European greater mouse-eared bats generally survive P. destructans invasion, despite some health deterioration at higher infection intensities (dependant on hibernation conditions). Conservation measures should minimise additional stressors to conserve constrained body reserves of bats during hibernation.
Transboundary and Emerging Diseases | 2015
Hana Bandouchova; Tomáš Bartonička; Hana Berková; Jiri Brichta; J. Cerny; Veronika Kovacova; Miroslav Kolarik; Bernd Köllner; P. Kulich; Natália Martínková; Z. Rehak; Gregory G. Turner; Jan Zukal; Jiri Pikula
Acta Veterinaria Brno | 2014
Jitka Osickova; Hana Banďouchová; Veronika Kovacova; Jiří Král; Ladislav Novotný; K. Ondracek; Miroslav Pohanka; Jana Sedlackova; Skochova H; F. Vitula; Jiří Pikula
Transboundary and Emerging Diseases | 2018
Alexandra Zahradníková; Veronika Kovacova; Natália Martínková; M. V. Orlova; Oleg Orlov; Vladimir Piacek; Jan Zukal; Jiří Pikula
Neuro endocrinology letters | 2014
Havelkova B; Veronika Kovacova; Bednarova I; Jiri Pikula; Miroslava Beklova
Forest Pathology | 2018
Veronika Kovacova; Miroslav Kolarik; Hana Bandouchova; Tomáš Bartonička; Hana Berková; Havelkova B; E. Hrudova; L. Kohoutova; Natália Martínková; Jan Zukal; Jiri Pikula
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University of Veterinary and Pharmaceutical Sciences Brno
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View shared research outputsUniversity of Veterinary and Pharmaceutical Sciences Brno
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