| Literature DB >> 32948231 |
Uros Glavinic1,2, Jasmin Varga1, Anca Ioana Paslaru1, Jeannine Hauri1, Paul Torgerson3, Francis Schaffner1,4, Eva Veronesi5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Since the huge epidemic of Zika virus (ZIKV) in Brazil in 2015, questions were raised to understand which mosquito species could transmit the virus. Aedes aegypti has been described as the main vector. However, other Aedes species (e.g. Ae. albopictus and Ae. japonicus) proven to be competent for other flaviviruses (e.g. West Nile, dengue and yellow fever), have been described as potential vectors for ZIKV under laboratory conditions. One of these, the Asian bush mosquito, Ae. japonicus, is widely distributed with high abundances in central-western Europe. In the present study, infection, dissemination and transmission rates of ZIKV (Dak84 strain) in two populations of Ae. japonicus from Switzerland (Zürich) and France (Steinbach, Haut-Rhin) were investigated under constant (27 °C) and fluctuating (14-27 °C, mean 23 °C) temperature regimes.Entities:
Keywords: Aedes japonicus; Fluctuating temperature; Vector competence; Zika virus
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32948231 PMCID: PMC7501641 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-020-04361-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Proportion (rates) of Aedes japonicus females from Zürich (Switzerland), positive to ZIKV in the abdomen (infection), head (dissemination) and saliva (transmission) after feeding on ZIKV-spiked blood
| DPI | IR (%) | DR (%) | TR (%) | TE (%) | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| C | 95% CI | F | 95% CI | C | 95% CI | F | 95% CI | C | 95% CI | F | 95% CI | C | 95% CI | F | 95% CI | |
| 7 | 25/30 (83) | 65–94 | 14/30 (47) | 28–66 | 10/25 (40) | 21–61 | 10/14 (71) | 42–92 | 7/10 (70) | 35–93 | 3/10 (30) | 7–65 | 7/30 (23) | 1–42 | 3/30 (10) | 2–26 |
| 14 | 28/30 (93) | 78–99 | 5/30 (17) | 6–35 | 9/28 (32) | 16–52 | 3/5 (60) | 15–95 | 6/9 (67) | 30–92 | 0/3 (0) | 0–7 | 6/30 (20) | 8–38 | 0/30 (0) | 0–11 |
| 21 | 26/30 (87) | 69–96% | 23/30 (77) | 58–90 | 3/26 (12) | 2–30 | 6/23 (26) | 10–48 | 2/3 (67) | 9–99 | 3/6 (50) | 12–88 | 2/30 (7) | 0.8–22 | 3/30 (10) | 2–26 |
Abbreviations: DPI, days post-oral feeding; C, constant temperature (27 °C); F, fluctuating temperature (21 ± 7 °C); IR, infection rate (proportion of survived mosquitoes containing infectious virus particles in the abdomen); DR, dissemination rate (proportion of survived mosquitoes containing infectious virus particles in the head among infected mosquitoes); TR, transmission rate (proportion of survived mosquitoes containing infectious virus particles in the saliva among those with disseminated infection); TE, transmission efficiency (proportion of females with positive saliva among all tested females); 95% CI, 95% confidence interval
Proportion (rates) of Aedes japonicus females from Steinbach (France) positive to ZIKV in the abdomen (infection), head (dissemination) and saliva (transmission) after feeding on ZIKV-spiked blood
| DPI | IR (%) | DR (%) | TR (%) | TE (%) | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| C | 95% CI | F | 95% CI | C | 95% CI | F | 95% CI | C | 95% CI | F | 95% CI | C | 95% CI | F | 95% CI | |
| 7 | 20/30 (67) | 47–83 | 22/30 (73) | 54–88 | 8/2 (40) | 19–64 | 7/22 (32) | 14–55 | 2/8 (25) | 3–65 | 3/7 (43) | 10–81 | 2/30 (7) | 0.8–22 | 3/30 (10) | 2–26 |
| 14 | 30/30 (100) | 88–100 | 18/30 (60) | 40–77 | 6/60 (20) | 8–38 | 11/18 (61) | 36–83 | 3/6 (50) | 12–88 | 8/11 (73) | 40–94 | 3/30 (10) | 2–26 | 8/30 (27) | 12–46 |
| 21 | 20/30 (67) | 47–83 | 14/30 (47) | 28–66 | 5/20 (25) | 9–49 | 9/14 (64) | 35–87 | 2/5 (40) | 5–85 | 1/9 (11) | 0.2–48 | 2/30 (7) | 0.8–22 | 1/30 (3) | 0.08–17 |
Abbreviations: DPI, days post-oral feeding; C, constant temperature (27 °C); F, fluctuating temperature (21 ± 7 °C); IR, infection rate (proportion of survived mosquitoes containing infectious virus particles in the abdomen); DR, dissemination rate (proportion of survived mosquitoes containing infectious virus particles in the head among infected mosquitoes); TR, transmission rate (proportion of survived mosquitoes containing infectious virus particles in the saliva among those with disseminated infection); TE, transmission efficiency (proportion of females with positive saliva among all tested females); 95% CI, 95% confidence interval
Fig. 1Viral loads of females orally fed with ZIKV-spiked blood. Data are given as PFU/female according to their origin (Zürich and Steinbach) and temperature condition, constant (27 °C) vs fluctuating (21 ± 7 °C) for an incubation period of 7, 14 and 21 days