Relevant Day/Night Temperatures Simulating Belgian Summer Conditions Reduce Japanese Encephalitis Virus Dissemination and Transmission in Belgian Field-Collected Culex pipiens Mosquitoes

Author:

Van den Eynde Claudia1ORCID,Sohier Charlotte1,Matthijs Severine2,De Regge Nick1

Affiliation:

1. Exotic and Vector-Borne Diseases, Sciensano, Groeselenberg 99, 1180 Brussels, Belgium

2. Viral Re-Emerging Enzootic and Bee Diseases, Sciensano, Groeselenberg 99, 1180 Brussels, Belgium

Abstract

Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV), a zoonotic mosquito-borne Flavivirus, can be considered an emerging infectious disease. Therefore, vector competence studies with indigenous mosquitoes from regions where JEV is not yet endemic are of great importance. In our study, we compared the vector competence of Culex pipiens mosquitoes emerged from Belgian field-caught larvae under two different temperature conditions: a constant 25 °C and a 25/15 °C day/night temperature gradient representing typical summer temperatures in Belgium. Three- to seven-day-old F0-generation mosquitoes were fed on a JEV genotype 3 Nakayama strain spiked blood-meal and incubated for 14 days at the two aforementioned temperature conditions. Similar infection rates of 36.8% and 35.2% were found in both conditions. The observed dissemination rate in the gradient condition was, however, significantly lower compared to the constant temperature condition (8% versus 53.6%, respectively). JEV was detected by RT-qPCR in the saliva of 13.3% of dissemination positive mosquitoes in the 25 °C condition, and this transmission was confirmed by virus isolation in 1 out of 2 RT-qPCR positive samples. No JEV transmission to saliva was detected in the gradient condition. These results suggest that JEV transmission by Culex pipiens mosquitoes upon an accidental introduction in our region is unlikely under current climatic conditions. This could change in the future when temperatures increase due to climate change.

Funder

Sciensano

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Virology,Infectious Diseases

Reference43 articles.

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3. Simon, L., Sandhu, D., Goyal, A., and Kruse, B. (2023, January 15). Japanese Encephalitis. StatPearls (Treasure Island, FL, USA), Available online: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK470423/.

4. Spickler, A.R. (2023, January 15). Japanese Encephalitis. Available online: https://www.cfsph.iastate.edu/Factsheets/pdfs/japanese_encephalitis.pdf.

5. European Center of Disease Control (2021, February 09). Facts about Japanese encephalitis. Factsheet. Available online: https://www.ecdc.europa.eu/en/japanese-encephalitis/facts.

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