| Literature DB >> 31364580 |
M Clé1, C Beck2, S Salinas1, S Lecollinet2, S Gutierrez3, P Van de Perre4, T Baldet3, V Foulongne4, Y Simonin1.
Abstract
Usutu virus (USUV) is an emerging arbovirus that was first isolated in South Africa in 1959. This Flavivirus is maintained in the environment through a typical enzootic cycle involving mosquitoes and birds. USUV has spread to a large part of the European continent over the two decades mainly leading to substantial avian mortalities with a significant recrudescence of bird infections recorded throughout Europe within the few last years. USUV infection in humans is considered to be most often asymptomatic or to cause mild clinical signs. Nonetheless, a few cases of neurological complications such as encephalitis or meningoencephalitis have been reported. USUV and West Nile virus (WNV) share many features, like a close phylogenetic relatedness and a similar ecology, with co-circulation frequently observed in nature. However, USUV has been much less studied and in-depth comparisons of the biology of these viruses are yet rare. In this review, we discuss the main body of knowledge regarding USUV and compare it with the literature on WNV, addressing in particular virological and clinical aspects, and pointing data gaps.Entities:
Keywords: Arboviruses; virology; virology (human) and epidemiology
Year: 2019 PMID: 31364580 PMCID: PMC6625183 DOI: 10.1017/S0950268819001213
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epidemiol Infect ISSN: 0950-2688 Impact factor: 2.451
Fig. 1.Worldwide USUV distribution. Concerned countries: Austria, Belgium, Burkina-Faso, Central African Republic, Croatia, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Israel, Italy, Ivory Coast, Kenya, Morocco, Nigeria, The Netherlands, Poland, Senegal, Serbia, Slovakia, South Africa, Spain, Switzerland, Tunisia, Uganda. Symbols indicate in which species USUV has been detected (man, birds, mosquitoes or horses). Method of identification (molecular or serological) is indicated for each species.
List of birds with USUV clinical infections
| Order | Common name | Scientific name | Migration pattern | Countries with USUV RT-PCR positive animals | Ref | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Passeriformes | Blackbird | R,P | AT, CZ,FR,DE,HU,IT,NL,BE, CH | [ | ||
| Common Starling | R,P,S | DE, IT | [ | |||
| Song Trush | M | AT, DE, SP | [ | |||
| Canary | Captive | DE | [ | |||
| House sparrow | R | AT, DE, CH | [ | |||
| Blue (great) tit | R,P,M | AT, CH | [ | |||
| European greenfinch | P | CH | [ | |||
| European robin | P | AT, CH | [ | |||
| Bullfinch | Captive | BE | [ | |||
| Nuthatch | R | AT | [ | |||
| Eurasian Jay | R, P | HU,IT | [ | |||
| Magpie | R | IT | [ | |||
| Barn Swallows | M | AT | [ | |||
| Strigiformes | Great Grey owl | Captive | AT, DE, CH, FR, IT, NL | [ | ||
| Long-eared owl | Captive | DE,IT | [ | |||
| Snowy owl | Captive | CH | [ | |||
| Tengmaml's owl | Captive | CH, IT | [ | |||
| Hawk owl | Captive | CH, DE | [ | |||
| Pygmy owl | Captive | CH | [ | |||
| Coraciiformes | Common Kingfisher | R,P,M | DE | [ | ||
| European Bee-eater | M | IT | [ | |||
| Piciformes | Great spotted woodpecker | R | BE | [ | ||
| European Green Woodpecker | R | DE, IT | [ | |||
| Charadriiformes | Inca Tern | Captive | DE | [ | ||
| Yellow-legged gull | R | IT | [ | |||
| Accipitriformes | Greater Spotted Eagle | M | IT | [ | ||
| Caprimulgiformes | Nightjar | M | IT | [ | ||
| Pelecaniformes | Grey Heron | R, P | IT | [ | ||
| Columbiformes | Collared Dove | R | IT | [ | ||
| Galliformes | Red-legged Partridge | R | IT | [ | ||
R, resident; P, partial; M, migratory; S, short distance.
Bird orders, common and scientific names and their behaviour (resident or migrating birds), as well as the countries having reported USUV positive RT-PCR animals are indicated.
Mosquito species found infected by USUV in the field and bridge vectors
| Species (bridge vector) | Country (site) | Year | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Israel (Haifa) | 2015 | [26] | |
| Italy (Emilia-Romagna) | 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012 | [ | |
| Austria (Graz) | 2018 | [66] | |
| Senegal (Kedegou) | 1998 | CRORA (unpublished) | |
| Italy (Emilia-Romagna) | 2010, 2011 | [53, 69] | |
| Senegal (Barkedji) | 2012, 2013 | [ | |
| Czech Republic (South-Moravia) | 2013 | [ | |
| Italy (Emilia-Romagna) | 2013 | [ | |
| Senegal (Barkedji) | 2003 | CRORA (unpublished) | |
| Senegal (Barkedji) | 2012, 2013 | [ | |
| South Africa (Natal) | 1959 | [ | |
| Israel (Sdeh Eliahu, Midrach) | 2015 | [26] | |
| Spain (Guadalquivir Delta) | 2009 | [ | |
| Central African Republic | 1969, 1980 | Institut Pasteur de Bangui (unpublished) | |
| Senegal (Kedegou) | 1974, 1998 | CRORA (unpublished) | |
| Austria (Linz, Graz) | 2018 | [66] | |
| France (Camargue Delta) | 2015 | [31] | |
| Germany (Emsdetten) | 2016 | [30] | |
| Germany (Freiburg) | 2014 | [30] | |
| Germany (Leipzig) | 2015 | [ | |
| Germany (Weinheim) | 2010 | [ | |
| Israel (Kityat Ata) | 2014 | [26] | |
| Israel (Yeftachel) | 2015 | [26] | |
| Italy (Emilia-Romagna) | 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016 | [ | |
| Italy (Friuli-Venezia-Giulia) | 2012 | [69] | |
| Italy (Lombardy) | 2009, 2011, 2013, 2014 | [69] | |
| Italy (Lazio) | 2018 | [ | |
| Italy (Liguria) | 2014 | [69] | |
| Italy (Marche) | 2011 | [69] | |
| Italy (Molise) | 2011 | [69] | |
| Italy (Piedmont) | 2009, 2010, 2011, 2014 | [69, | |
| Italy (Sardinia) | 2011, 2013 | [69] | |
| Italy (Tuscany) | 2009, 2010 | [52, 69] | |
| Italy (Veneto) | 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013 | [69, | |
| Serbia (Titel, Zrejanin) | 2014 | [29] | |
| Spain (Ebre Delta) | 2006 | [ | |
| Switzerland (Ticino, Geneva) | 2011, 2012 | [ | |
| Ivory Coast | 2004 | CRORA (unpublished) | |
| Kenya (Kisumu) | 2007–2012 | [65] | |
| Senegal (Barkedji) | 1993 | CRORA (unpublished) | |
| Uganda (Jinja) | 2012 | [25] | |
| Italy (Molise) | 2011 | [69] | |
| Central African Republic | 1969, 1980 | Institut Pasteur de Bangui (unpublished) | |
| Uganda (Entebbe) | 1962 | [4] | |
| Italy (Emilia-Romagna) | 2011, 2012, 2013 | [53, 69, 72] | |
| Italy (Veneto) | 2010 | [69] | |
| Italy (Molise) | 2011 | [69] |
P, potential; S, small probability; N, no probability.
Mosquito species and then countries are ordered alphabetically. Bridge vectors. P: refer to potential bridge vectors, i.e. mosquito species that readily bite birds and humans. S: refers to species with a lower probability of being bridge vectors and encompass opportunistic species that rarely bite both humans and birds, or have a low vector competence for WNV. N: refers to species that have very low or no probability of being a competent bridge vector. For Africa, USUV has been isolated only in countries in which entomological surveillance programmes have been undertaken particularly Senegal and Uganda, suggesting that its geographic distribution may be much wider than the reported detection.
Recently renamed Coquilletidia aurites.
Formerly named Aedes caspius.
Formerly named Aedes detritus.
Oral infection experiments. Infection, dissemination and transmission rates for mosquitoes 14 days after oral exposure to USUV
| Species/(populations) | USUV Strain used | Blood meal titer (PFU/ml) (TCID50/ml) | Infection rate | Dissemination rate | Transmission rate | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SAAR 1776 | 2 × 107 | 33.3% (1/3) | 0% (0/1) | – | [ | |
| 2 × 107 | 22.2% (2/9) | 0% (0/2) | – | |||
| 2 × 107 | 0% (0/1) | – | – | |||
| 1.8 × 108 | ||||||
| USUV, Bologna '09 | 4 × 107 | Not studied | [ | |||
| SAAR 1776 | 1 × 107.5 | [ | ||||
| SAAR 1776 | 1 × 106.95 | [ | ||||
| SAAR 1776 | 1 × 105.95 | – | – | [ | ||
| SAAR 1776 | 1 × 106 (25°) | [ | ||||
| SAAR 1776 | 1 × 106 (25°) | – | – | |||
| USUV1 | 0.66×107.5 | – | – | [ | ||
| USUV2 | 0.66×107.5 | |||||
| USUV3 | 0.66×107.9 |
PFU, plaque-forming unit; TCID50, tissue culture infectious dose 50%.
After 14 days incubation at 27–28 °C and 80% relative humidity (except for Hernández-Triana et al., 2018 for which both UK lines of Culex pipiens were tested for their vector competence for the SAAR-1776 strain of USUV at 25 °C), fed mosquitoes were analysed for USUV infection of their bodies (infection), of their legs and wings (dissemination), and the presence of virus in the saliva (transmission).
No. infected mosquito bodies/no. mosquitoes tested.
No. mosquitoes with infected wings and legs/no. infected mosquitoes.
Formerly named Aedes detritus
Chronological description of human cases worldwide
| Acute infections ( | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Country | Year | Number | Sample | Clinic | Studied population | Diagnostic method | ref |
| CAR | 1981 | 1 | Blood | Eruptive fever | Clinical case | Culture | [ |
| Burkina | 2004 | 1 | Blood | Fever and jaundice | Clinical case | Culture | [ |
| Italy | 2009 | 1 | CSF | Meningoencephalitis | Clinical case | Panflavi RT-PCR + sequence | [ |
| 2009 | 1 | Blood | Encephalitis | Clinical case | Procleix-WNV + panflavi RT-PCR + sequence | [ | |
| 2008–9 | 3/44 | CSF | Meningoencephalitis | Meningoencephalitis patients | Specific RT-PCR | [ | |
| 2008–11 | 8/306 + 2/609 | CSF + blood | Meningoencephalitis /healthy | Meningoencephalitis patients (CSF) + various healthy and sick subjects (serum) | Specific RT-PCR + seroneutralisation | [ | |
| Croatia | 2013 | 3/95 | Blood | Meningoencephalitis | Meningoencephalitis patients | ELISA + seroneutralisation | [ |
| 2018 | 3/178 | Blood + Urine | Neuroinvasive disease | Neuroinvasive cohort | Specific RT-PCR + seroneutralisation | [ | |
| Germany | 2016 | 1 | Blood | Healthy | Blood donors (n ?) | Cobas WNV + sequence | [ |
| France | 2016 | 1/666 | CSF | Idiopathic facial paralysis | Patients with infectious and/or neurological signs | RT-PCR panflavi + sequence | [ |
| Austria | 2017 | 6/12 047 | Blood | Healthy | Blood donors | Cobas WNV + sequence | [ |
| 2018 | 18/31 598 | Blood | Healthy | Blood donors | Cobas WNV + specific RT-PCR + sequence | [ | |
CAR, Central African Republic.