Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Ward Deboutte is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Ward Deboutte.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Modular approach to customise sample preparation procedures for viral metagenomics: a reproducible protocol for virome analysis.

Nádia Conceição-Neto; Mark Zeller; Hanne Lefrère; Pieter De Bruyn; Leen Beller; Ward Deboutte; Claude Kwe Yinda; Rob Lavigne; Piet Maes; Marc Van Ranst; Elisabeth Heylen; Jelle Matthijnssens

A major limitation for better understanding the role of the human gut virome in health and disease is the lack of validated methods that allow high throughput virome analysis. To overcome this, we evaluated the quantitative effect of homogenisation, centrifugation, filtration, chloroform treatment and random amplification on a mock-virome (containing nine highly diverse viruses) and a bacterial mock-community (containing four faecal bacterial species) using quantitative PCR and next-generation sequencing. This resulted in an optimised protocol that was able to recover all viruses present in the mock-virome and strongly alters the ratio of viral versus bacterial and 16S rRNA genetic material in favour of viruses (from 43.2% to 96.7% viral reads and from 47.6% to 0.19% bacterial reads). Furthermore, our study indicated that most of the currently used virome protocols, using small filter pores and/or stringent centrifugation conditions may have largely overlooked large viruses present in viromes. We propose NetoVIR (Novel enrichment technique of VIRomes), which allows for a fast, reproducible and high throughput sample preparation for viral metagenomics studies, introducing minimal bias. This procedure is optimised mainly for faecal samples, but with appropriate concentration steps can also be used for other sample types with lower initial viral loads.


BMC Genomics | 2017

Highly diverse population of Picornaviridae and other members of the Picornavirales , in Cameroonian fruit bats

Claude Kwe Yinda; Roland Zell; Ward Deboutte; Mark Zeller; Nádia Conceição-Neto; Elisabeth Heylen; Piet Maes; Nick J. Knowles; Stephen Mbigha Ghogomu; Marc Van Ranst; Jelle Matthijnssens

BackgroundThe order Picornavirales represents a diverse group of positive-stranded RNA viruses with small non-enveloped icosahedral virions. Recently, bats have been identified as an important reservoir of several highly pathogenic human viruses. Since many members of the Picornaviridae family cause a wide range of diseases in humans and animals, this study aimed to characterize members of the order Picornavirales in fruit bat populations located in the Southwest region of Cameroon. These bat populations are frequently in close contact with humans due to hunting, selling and eating practices, which provides ample opportunity for interspecies transmissions.ResultsFecal samples from 87 fruit bats (Eidolon helvum and Epomophorus gambianus), were combined into 25 pools and analyzed using viral metagenomics. In total, Picornavirales reads were found in 19 pools, and (near) complete genomes of 11 picorna-like viruses were obtained from 7 of these pools. The picorna-like viruses possessed varied genomic organizations (monocistronic or dicistronic), and arrangements of gene cassettes. Some of the viruses belonged to established families, including the Picornaviridae, whereas others clustered distantly from known viruses and most likely represent novel genera and families. Phylogenetic and nucleotide composition analyses suggested that mammals were the likely host species of bat sapelovirus, bat kunsagivirus and bat crohivirus, whereas the remaining viruses (named bat iflavirus, bat posalivirus, bat fisalivirus, bat cripavirus, bat felisavirus, bat dicibavirus and bat badiciviruses 1 and 2) were most likely diet-derived.ConclusionThe existence of a vast genetic variability of picorna-like viruses in fruit bats may increase the probability of spillover infections to humans especially when humans and bats have direct contact as the case in this study site. However, further screening for these viruses in humans will fully indicate their zoonotic potential.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Novel highly divergent reassortant bat rotaviruses in Cameroon, without evidence of zoonosis

Claude Kwe Yinda; Mark Zeller; Nádia Conceição-Neto; Piet Maes; Ward Deboutte; Leen Beller; Elisabeth Heylen; Stephen Mbigha Ghogomu; Marc Van Ranst; Jelle Matthijnssens

Bats are an important reservoir for zoonotic viruses. To date, only three RVA strains have been reported in bats in Kenya and China. In the current study we investigated the genetic diversity of RVAs in fecal samples from 87 straw-colored fruit bats living in close contact with humans in Cameroon using viral metagenomics. Five (near) complete RVA genomes were obtained. A single RVA strain showed a partial relationship with the Kenyan bat RVA strain, whereas the other strains were completely novel. Only the VP7 and VP4 genes showed significant variability, indicating the occurrence of frequent reassortment events. Comparing these bat RVA strains with currently used human RVA screening primers indicated that most of the novel VP7 and VP4 segments would not be detected in routine epidemiological screening studies. Therefore, novel consensus screening primers were developed and used to screen samples from infants with gastroenteritis living in close proximity with the studied bat population. Although RVA infections were identified in 36% of the infants, there was no evidence of zoonosis. This study identified multiple novel bat RVA strains, but further epidemiological studies in humans will have to assess if these viruses have the potential to cause gastroenteritis in humans.


Ecology and Evolution | 2017

Viral gut metagenomics of sympatric wild and domestic canids, and monitoring of viruses: Insights from an endangered wolf population

Nádia Conceição-Neto; Raquel Godinho; Francisco Álvares; Claude Kwe Yinda; Ward Deboutte; Mark Zeller; Lies Laenen; Elisabeth Heylen; Sara Roque; Francisco Petrucci-Fonseca; N. C. Santos; Marc Van Ranst; J. Mesquita; Jelle Matthijnssens

Abstract Animal host–microbe interactions are a relevant concern for wildlife conservation, particularly regarding generalist pathogens, where domestic host species can play a role in the transmission of infectious agents, such as viruses, to wild animals. Knowledge on viral circulation in wild host species is still scarce and can be improved by the recent advent of modern molecular approaches. We aimed to characterize the fecal virome and identify viruses of potential conservation relevance of diarrheic free‐ranging wolves and sympatric domestic dogs from Central Portugal, where a small and threatened wolf population persists in a highly anthropogenically modified landscape. Using viral metagenomics, we screened diarrheic stools collected from wolves (n = 8), feral dogs (n = 4), and pet dogs (n = 6), all collected within wolf range. We detected novel highly divergent viruses as well as known viral pathogens with established effects on population dynamics, including canine distemper virus, a novel bocavirus, and canine minute virus. Furthermore, we performed a 4‐year survey for the six wolf packs comprising this endangered wolf population, screening 93 fecal samples from 36 genetically identified wolves for canine distemper virus and the novel bocavirus, previously identified using our metagenomics approach. Our novel approach using metagenomics for viral screening in noninvasive samples of wolves and dogs has profound implications on the knowledge of both virology and wildlife diseases, establishing a complementary tool to traditional screening methods for the conservation of threatened species.


Gut | 2018

Low eukaryotic viral richness is associated with faecal microbiota transplantation success in patients with UC

Nádia Conceição-Neto; Ward Deboutte; Tim Dierckx; Kathleen Machiels; Jun Wang; Kwe Claude Yinda; Piet Maes; Marc Van Ranst; Marie Joossens; Jeroen Raes; Severine Vermeire; Jelle Matthijnssens

We read with interest the recent Gut study by Zuo and colleagues showing that a good outcome of faecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) in Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) was associated with bacteriophage transfer.1 FMT is an established treatment to restore a balance in disturbed intestinal microbiotas of patients with CDI,2 3 and recent multicentre randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trials showed its effectiveness in inducing clinical and endoscopic remission in patients with UC.4 We examined the gut virome dynamics of nine patients with UC who were undergoing FMT (64 patient and 8 healthy donor samples).5 Two patients with UC achieved long-lasting complete remission with mucosal healing (>2 years; figure 1: patient 1 and 3), and one patient reported temporary remission for 6 weeks (figure 1; patient 4).5 The remaining six patients did not respond to treatment. Using the NetoVIR protocol,6 we analysed the faecal virome (both RNA/DNA genomes of phages and eukaryotic viruses) using tailored bioinformatics approaches (see online supplementary data). Irrespective of their outcome, no statistical differences were observed in phageome richness between patients with UC and healthy donors (figure 2A) at any time point, in contrast …


Genome Biology and Evolution | 2018

A Novel Hantavirus of the European Mole, Bruges Virus, Is Involved in Frequent Nova Virus Coinfections

Lies Laenen; Valentijn Vergote; Liana Eleni Kafetzopoulou; Tony Bokalanga Wawina; Despoina Vassou; Joseph A. Cook; Jean-Pierre Hugot; Ward Deboutte; Hae Ji Kang; Peter T. Witkowski; Pánja Köppen-Rung; Detlev H. Krüger; Martina Ličková; Alexander Stang; Lucia Strieskova; Tomáš Szemes; Janusz Markowski; Janusz Hejduk; Dimitris Kafetzopoulos; Marc Van Ranst; Richard Yanagihara; Boris Klempa; Piet Maes

Abstract Hantaviruses are zoonotic viruses with a complex evolutionary history of virus–host coevolution and cross-species transmission. Although hantaviruses have a broad reservoir host range, virus–host relationships were previously thought to be strict, with a single virus species infecting a single host species. Here, we describe Bruges virus, a novel hantavirus harbored by the European mole (Talpa europaea), which is the well-known host of Nova virus. Phylogenetic analyses of all three genomic segments showed tree topology inconsistencies, suggesting that Bruges virus has emerged from cross-species transmission and ancient reassortment events. A high number of coinfections with Bruges and Nova viruses was detected, but no evidence was found for reassortment between these two hantaviruses. These findings highlight the complexity of hantavirus evolution and the importance of further investigation of hantavirus–reservoir relationships.


bioRxiv | 2016

Evidence for reassortment of highly divergent novel rotaviruses from bats in Cameroon, without evidence for human interspecies transmissions

Claude Kwe Yinda; Mark Zeller; Nádia Conceição-Neto; Piet Maes; Ward Deboutte; Leen Beller; Elisabeth Heylen; Stephen Mbigha Ghogomu; Marc Van Ranst; Jelle Matthijnssens

Bats are an important reservoir for pathogenic human respiratory and hemorrhagic viruses but only little is known about bat viruses causing gastroenteritis in humans, including rotavirus A strains (RVA). Only three RVA strains have been reported in bats in Kenya (straw-colored fruit bat) and in China (lesser horseshoe and a stoliczka’s trident bat), being highly divergent from each other. To further elucidate the potential of bat RVAs to cause gastroenteritis in humans we started by investigating the genetic diversity of RVAs in fecal samples from 87 straw-colored fruit bats living in close contact with humans in Cameroon using metagenomics. Five samples contained significant numbers of RVA Illumina reads, sufficient to obtain their (near) complete genomes. A single RVA strain showed a close phylogenetic relationship with the Kenyan bat RVA strain in six gene segments, including VP7 (G25), whereas the other gene segments represented novel genotypes as ratified by the RCWG. The 4 other RVA strains were highly divergent from known strains (but very similar among each other) possessing all novel genotypes. Only the VP7 and VP4 genes showed a significant variability representing multiple novel G and P genotypes, indicating the frequent occurrence of reassortment events. Comparing these bat RVA strains with currently used human RVA screening primers indicated that several of the novel VP7 and VP4 segments would not be detected in routine epidemiological screening studies. Therefore, novel VP6 based screening primers matching both human and bat RVAs were developed and used to screen samples from 25 infants with gastroenteritis living in close proximity with the studied bat population. Although RVA infections were identified in 36% of the infants, Sanger sequencing did not indicate evidence of interspecies transmissions. This study identified multiple novel bat RVA strains, but further epidemiological studies in humans will have to assess if these viruses have the potential to cause gastroenteritis in humans.


Virus Evolution | 2018

Cameroonian fruit bats harbor divergent viruses, including rotavirus H, bastroviruses, and picobirnaviruses using an alternative genetic code

Claude Kwe Yinda; Stephen Mbigha Ghogomu; Nádia Conceição-Neto; Leen Beller; Ward Deboutte; Emiel Vanhulle; Piet Maes; Marc Van Ranst; Jelle Matthijnssens

Abstract Most human emerging infectious diseases originate from wildlife and bats are a major reservoir of viruses, a few of which have been highly pathogenic to humans. In some regions of Cameroon, bats are hunted and eaten as a delicacy. This close proximity between human and bats provides ample opportunity for zoonotic events. To elucidate the viral diversity of Cameroonian fruit bats, we collected and metagenomically screened eighty-seven fecal samples of Eidolon helvum and Epomophorus gambianus fruit bats. The results showed a plethora of known and novel viruses. Phylogenetic analyses of the eleven gene segments of the first complete bat rotavirus H genome, showed clearly separated clusters of human, porcine, and bat rotavirus H strains, not indicating any recent interspecies transmission events. Additionally, we identified and analyzed a bat bastrovirus genome (a novel group of recently described viruses, related to astroviruses and hepatitis E viruses), confirming their recombinant nature, and provide further evidence of additional recombination events among bat bastroviruses. Interestingly, picobirnavirus-like RNA-dependent RNA polymerase gene segments were identified using an alternative mitochondrial genetic code, and further principal component analyses suggested that they may have a similar lifestyle to mitoviruses, a group of virus-like elements known to infect the mitochondria of fungi. Although identified bat coronavirus, parvovirus, and cyclovirus strains belong to established genera, most of the identified partitiviruses and densoviruses constitute putative novel genera in their respective families. Finally, the results of the phage community analyses of these bats indicate a very diverse geographically distinct bat phage population, probably reflecting different diets and gut bacterial ecosystems.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Nanopore sequencing as a revolutionary diagnostic tool for porcine viral enteric disease complexes identifies porcine kobuvirus as an important enteric virus

Sebastiaan Theuns; Bert Vanmechelen; Quinten Bernaert; Ward Deboutte; Marilou Vandenhole; Leen Beller; Jelle Matthijnssens; Piet Maes; Hans Nauwynck

Enteric diseases in swine are often caused by different pathogens and thus metagenomics are a useful tool for diagnostics. The capacities of nanopore sequencing for viral diagnostics were investigated here. First, cell culture-grown porcine epidemic diarrhea virus and rotavirus A were pooled and sequenced on a MinION. Reads were already detected at 7 seconds after start of sequencing, resulting in high sequencing depths (19.2 to 103.5X) after 3 h. Next, diarrheic feces of a one-week-old piglet was analyzed. Almost all reads (99%) belonged to bacteriophages, which may have reshaped the piglet’s microbiome. Contigs matched Bacteroides, Escherichia and Enterococcus phages. Moreover, porcine kobuvirus was discovered in the feces for the first time in Belgium. Suckling piglets shed kobuvirus from one week of age, but an association between peak of viral shedding (106.42–107.01 copies/swab) and diarrheic signs was not observed during a follow-up study. Retrospective analysis showed the widespread (n = 25, 56.8% positive) of genetically moderately related kobuviruses among Belgian diarrheic piglets. MinION enables rapid detection of enteric viruses. Such new methodologies will change diagnostics, but more extensive validations should be conducted. The true enteric pathogenicity of porcine kobuvirus should be questioned, while its subclinical importance cannot be excluded.


BMC Genomics | 2018

Discovery and genome characterization of three new Jeilongviruses, a lineage of paramyxoviruses characterized by their unique membrane proteins

Bert Vanmechelen; Magda Bletsa; Lies Laenen; Ana Rita Lopes; Valentijn Vergote; Leen Beller; Ward Deboutte; Miša Korva; Tatjana Avšič Županc; Joëlle Goüy de Bellocq; Sophie Gryseels; Herwig Leirs; Philippe Lemey; Bram Vrancken; Piet Maes

BackgroundIn the past decade, many new paramyxoviruses that do not belong to any of the seven established genera in the family Paramyxoviridae have been discovered. Amongst them are J-virus (JPV), Beilong virus (BeiPV) and Tailam virus (TlmPV), three paramyxovirus species found in rodents. Based on their similarities, it has been suggested that these viruses should compose a new genus, tentatively called ‘Jeilongvirus’.ResultsHere we present the complete genomes of three newly discovered paramyxoviruses, one found in a bank vole (Myodes glareolus) from Slovenia and two in a single, co-infected Rungwe brush-furred rat (Lophuromys machangui) from Mozambique, that represent three new, separate species within the putative genus ‘Jeilongvirus’. The genome organization of these viruses is similar to other paramyxoviruses, but like JPV, BeiPV and TlmPV, they possess an additional open reading frame, encoding a transmembrane protein, that is located between the F and G genes. As is the case for all Jeilongviruses, the G genes of the viruses described here are unusually large, and their encoded proteins are characterized by a remarkable amino acid composition pattern that is not seen in other paramyxoviruses, but resembles certain motifs found in Orthopneumovirus G proteins.ConclusionsThe phylogenetic clustering of JPV, BeiPV and TlmPV with the viruses described here, as well as their shared features that set them apart from other paramyxoviruses, provide additional support for the recognition of the genus ‘Jeilongvirus’.

Collaboration


Dive into the Ward Deboutte's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Piet Maes

Rega Institute for Medical Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jelle Matthijnssens

Rega Institute for Medical Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Marc Van Ranst

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nádia Conceição-Neto

Rega Institute for Medical Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Claude Kwe Yinda

Rega Institute for Medical Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Leen Beller

Rega Institute for Medical Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Elisabeth Heylen

Rega Institute for Medical Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mark Zeller

Rega Institute for Medical Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lies Laenen

Rega Institute for Medical Research

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge