虫媒病毒
基孔肯雅
载体(分子生物学)
寨卡病毒
白纹伊蚊
生物
伊蚊
爆发
病毒学
登革热
病毒
遗传学
生态学
埃及伊蚊
基因
幼虫
重组DNA
作者
Rachel Bellone,Pierre Lechat,Laurence Mousson,Valentine Gilbart,Géraldine Piorkowski,Chloé Bohers,Andres Merits,Étienne Kornobis,Julie Réveillaud,Christophe Paupy,Marie Vazeille,Jean-Philippe Martinet,Yoann Madec,Xavier De Lamballerie,Catherine Dauga,Anna‐Bella Failloux
出处
期刊:Journal of Travel Medicine
[Oxford University Press]
日期:2023-04-25
卷期号:30 (4)
被引量:5
摘要
Abstract Background Climate change and globalization contribute to the expansion of mosquito vectors and their associated pathogens. Long spared, temperate regions have had to deal with the emergence of arboviruses traditionally confined to tropical regions. Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) was reported for the first time in Europe in 2007, causing a localized outbreak in Italy, which then recurred repeatedly over the years in other European localities. This raises the question of climate effects, particularly temperature, on the dynamics of vector-borne viruses. The objective of this study is to improve the understanding of the molecular mechanisms set up in the vector in response to temperature. Methods We combine three complementary approaches by examining Aedes albopictus mosquito gene expression (transcriptomics), bacterial flora (metagenomics) and CHIKV evolutionary dynamics (genomics) induced by viral infection and temperature changes. Results We show that temperature alters profoundly mosquito gene expression, bacterial microbiome and viral population diversity. We observe that (i) CHIKV infection upregulated most genes (mainly in immune and stress-related pathways) at 20°C but not at 28°C, (ii) CHIKV infection significantly increased the abundance of Enterobacteriaceae Serratia marcescens at 28°C and (iii) CHIKV evolutionary dynamics were different according to temperature. Conclusion The substantial changes detected in the vectorial system (the vector and its bacterial microbiota, and the arbovirus) lead to temperature-specific adjustments to reach the ultimate goal of arbovirus transmission; at 20°C and 28°C, the Asian tiger mosquito Ae. albopictus was able to transmit CHIKV at the same efficiency. Therefore, CHIKV is likely to continue its expansion in the northern regions and could become a public health problem in more countries than those already affected in Europe.
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