| Literature DB >> 32321560 |
Nadya Urakova1, Marco Brustolin1, Renuka E Joseph1,2, Rebecca M Johnson1,2, Sujit Pujhari1, Jason L Rasgon3,4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recent studies demonstrate that insect-specific viruses can influence the ability of their mosquito hosts to become infected with and transmit arboviruses of medical and veterinary importance. The aim of this study was to evaluate the interactions between Anopheles gambiae densovirus (AgDNV) (Parvoviridae) (a benign insect-specific virus that infects An. gambiae mosquitoes) and Mayaro virus (MAYV) (Togaviridae) (an emerging human pathogen that can be transmitted by An. gambiae) in both insect cell culture and mosquitoes.Entities:
Keywords: Anopheles gambiae; Cell culture; Densovirus; Mayaro virus; Vector competence
Year: 2020 PMID: 32321560 PMCID: PMC7178629 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-020-04072-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Fig. 1MAYV replication in AgDNV-infected or uninfected Mos55 cells: MAYV BE AR strain and MAYV BE AN strain
Fig. 2Correlation between MAYV (BE AN strain) body titers and AgDNV titers in An. gambiae. MAYV and AgDNV body titers for each mosquito were plotted and analysed with the Spearman’s rank correlation test to determine relationships. There was a significant negative correlation between MAYV and AgDNV body titers 10 days post-blood meal (n = 48, r= − 0.365, P = 0.0117)
Infection, dissemination and transmission rates for MAYV in An. gambiae mosquitoes infected or uninfected with AgDNV at day 10 post-MAYV infection
| Group | Infection rate | Dissemination rate | Transmission efficiency |
|---|---|---|---|
| Experiment 1 | |||
| MAYV only | 100% (13/13) | 15% (2/13) | 0 |
| AgDNV+MAYV | 79% (11/14) | 54% (6/11) | 0 |
| Experiment 2 | |||
| MAYV only | 93% (28/30) | 50% (14/28) | 0 |
| AgDNV+MAYV | 97% (33/34) | 48% (16/33) | 6% (2/34) |
Notes: Infection rate: percentage of engorged mosquitoes with infected body; dissemination rate: percentage of mosquitoes with infected bodies that were also tested positive for infection in the legs; transmission efficiency: percentage of engorged mosquitoes with infectious saliva