Mimicking superinfection exclusion disrupts alphavirus infection and transmission in the yellow fever mosquitoAedes aegypti

Author:

Reitmayer Christine M.1ORCID,Levitt Emily1,Basu Sanjay1ORCID,Atkinson Barry1ORCID,Fragkoudis Rennos1,Merits Andres2ORCID,Lumley Sarah1ORCID,Larner Will1,Diaz Adriana V.1ORCID,Rooney Sara1,Thomas Callum J. E.1,von Wyschetzki Katharina1,Rausalu Kai2,Alphey Luke1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Arthropod Genetics, The Pirbright Institute, Pirbright, Woking GU24 0NF, United Kingdom

2. Applied Virology, Institute of Technology, University of Tartu, Tartu 50411, Estonia

Abstract

Multiple viruses, including pathogenic viruses, bacteriophages, and even plant viruses, cause a phenomenon termed superinfection exclusion whereby a currently infected cell is resistant to secondary infection by the same or a closely related virus. In alphaviruses, this process is thought to be mediated, at least in part, by the viral protease (nsP2) which is responsible for processing the nonstructural polyproteins (P123 and P1234) into individual proteins (nsP1–nsP4), forming the viral replication complex. Taking a synthetic biology approach, we mimicked this naturally occurring phenomenon by generating a superinfection exclusion-like state inAedes aegyptimosquitoes, rendering them refractory to alphavirus infection. By artificially expressing Sindbis virus (SINV) and chikungunya virus (CHIKV) nsP2 in mosquito cells and transgenic mosquitoes, we demonstrated a reduction in both SINV and CHIKV viral replication rates in cells following viral infection as well as reduced infection prevalence, viral titers, and transmission potential in mosquitoes.

Funder

Wellcome Trust

UKRI | Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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