Literature DB >> 16358422

Host range, amplification and arboviral disease emergence.

S C Weaver1.   

Abstract

Etiologic agents of arboviral diseases are primarily zoonotic pathogens that are maintained in nature in cycles involving arthropod transmission among a variety of susceptible reservoir hosts. In the simplest form of human exposure, spillover occurs from the enzootic cycle when humans enter zoonotic foci and/or enzootic amplification increases circulation near humans. Examples include Eastern (EEEV) and Western equine encephalitis viruses (WEEV), as well as West Nile (WNV), St. Louis encephalitis (SLEV) and Yellow fever viruses. Spillover can involve direct transmission to humans by primary enzootic vectors (e.g. WNV, SLEV and WEEV) and/or bridge vectors with more catholic feeding preferences that include humans (e.g. EEEV). Some viruses, such as Rift Valley fever, Japanese encephalitis and Venezuelan equine encephalitis viruses (VEEV) undergo secondary amplification involving replication in livestock animals, resulting in greater levels of spillover to humans in rural settings. In the case of VEEV, secondary amplification involves equines and requires adaptive mutations in enzootic strains that allow for efficient viremia production. Two of the most important human arboviral pathogens, Yellow fever and dengue viruses (DENV), have gone one step further and adopted humans as their amplification hosts, allowing for urban disease. The ancestral forms of DENV, sylvatic viruses transmitted among nonhuman primate reservoir hosts by arboreal mosquitoes, adapted to efficiently infect the urban mosquito vectors Aedes aegypti and Ae. albopictus during the past few thousand years as civilizations arose. Comparative studies of the sylvatic and urban forms of DENV may elucidate the evolution of arboviral virulence and the prospects for DENV eradication should effective vaccines be implemented.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16358422     DOI: 10.1007/3-211-29981-5_4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Virol Suppl        ISSN: 0939-1983


  43 in total

1.  Detection of flaviviruses and orthobunyaviruses in mosquitoes in the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico in 2008.

Authors:  Jose A Farfan-Ale; Maria A Loroño-Pino; Julian E Garcia-Rejon; Victor Soto; Ming Lin; Molly Staley; Karin S Dorman; Lyric C Bartholomay; Einat Hovav; Bradley J Blitvich
Journal:  Vector Borne Zoonotic Dis       Date:  2010-04-06       Impact factor: 2.133

2.  Universal primers for the amplification and sequence analysis of actin-1 from diverse mosquito species.

Authors:  Molly Staley; Karin S Dorman; Lyric C Bartholomay; Ildefonso Fernández-Salas; Jose A Farfan-Ale; Maria A Loroño-Pino; Julian E Garcia-Rejon; Luis Ibarra-Juarez; Bradley J Blitvich
Journal:  J Am Mosq Control Assoc       Date:  2010-06       Impact factor: 0.917

3.  Treatment of Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus infection with (-)-carbodine.

Authors:  Justin G Julander; Richard A Bowen; Jagadeeshwar R Rao; Craig Day; Kristiina Shafer; Donald F Smee; John D Morrey; Chung K Chu
Journal:  Antiviral Res       Date:  2008-08-15       Impact factor: 5.970

4.  A risk index model for predicting eastern equine encephalitis virus transmission to horses in Florida.

Authors:  Patrick Vander Kelen; Joni A Downs; Thomas Unnasch; Lillian Stark
Journal:  Appl Geogr       Date:  2014-03-01

5.  Altered mitochondrial dynamics as a consequence of Venezuelan Equine encephalitis virus infection.

Authors:  Forrest Keck; Taryn Brooks-Faulconer; Tyler Lark; Pavitra Ravishankar; Charles Bailey; Carolina Salvador-Morales; Aarthi Narayanan
Journal:  Virulence       Date:  2017-01-25       Impact factor: 5.882

6.  CD4+ T cells provide protection against acute lethal encephalitis caused by Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus.

Authors:  Nadezhda E Yun; Bi-Hung Peng; Andrea S Bertke; Viktoriya Borisevich; Jennifer K Smith; Jeanon N Smith; Allison L Poussard; Milagros Salazar; Barbara M Judy; Michele A Zacks; D Mark Estes; Slobodan Paessler
Journal:  Vaccine       Date:  2009-05-03       Impact factor: 3.641

7.  Development of a vaccine to prevent Japanese encephalitis: a brief review.

Authors:  Viroj Wiwanitkit
Journal:  Int J Gen Med       Date:  2009-12-29

8.  Rift Valley fever virus(Bunyaviridae: Phlebovirus): an update on pathogenesis, molecular epidemiology, vectors, diagnostics and prevention.

Authors:  Michel Pepin; Michele Bouloy; Brian H Bird; Alan Kemp; Janusz Paweska
Journal:  Vet Res       Date:  2010 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 3.683

9.  Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus replicon particle vaccine protects nonhuman primates from intramuscular and aerosol challenge with ebolavirus.

Authors:  Andrew S Herbert; Ana I Kuehne; James F Barth; Ramon A Ortiz; Donald K Nichols; Samantha E Zak; Spencer W Stonier; Majidat A Muhammad; Russell R Bakken; Laura I Prugar; Gene G Olinger; Jennifer L Groebner; John S Lee; William D Pratt; Max Custer; Kurt I Kamrud; Jonathan F Smith; Mary Kate Hart; John M Dye
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2013-02-13       Impact factor: 5.103

10.  Development of an algorithm for production of inactivated arbovirus antigens in cell culture.

Authors:  C H Goodman; B J Russell; J O Velez; J J Laven; W L Nicholson; D A Bagarozzi; J L Moon; K Bedi; B W Johnson
Journal:  J Virol Methods       Date:  2014-08-04       Impact factor: 2.014

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