Author:
Mutsaers Maud,Engdahl Cecilia Springer,Wilkman Lukas,Ahlm Clas,Evander Magnus,Lwande Olivia Wesula
Abstract
Abstract
Background
O’nyong-nyong virus (ONNV) is a mosquito-borne alphavirus causing sporadic outbreaks of febrile illness with rash and polyarthralgia. Up to now, ONNV has been restricted to Africa and only two competent vectors have been found, Anopheles gambiae and An. funestus, which are also known malaria vectors. With globalization and invasive mosquito species migrating to ONNV endemic areas, there is a possible risk of introduction of the virus to other countries and continents. Anophelesstephensi, is closely related to An. gambiae and one of the invasive mosquito species of Asian origin that is now present in the Horn of Africa and spreading further east. We hypothesize that An. stephensi, a known primary urban malaria vector, may also serve as a new possible vector for ONNV.
Methods
One-week-old female adult An.stephensi were exposed to ONNV-infected blood, and the vector competence for ONNV, i.e. infection rates (IRs), dissemination rates (DRs), transmission rates (TRs), dissemination efficiency (DEs) and transmission efficiency (TEs), were evaluated. Infection (IRs), dissemination efficiency (DEs) and transmission efficiency (TEs) were determined. Detection of ONNV RNA was analysed by RT-qPCR in the thorax and abdomen, head, wings, legs and saliva of the infected mosquitoes at four different time points, day 7, 14, 21 and 28 after blood meal. Infectious virus in saliva was assessed by infection of Vero B4 cells.
Results
The mean mortality across all sampling times was 27.3% (95 confidence interval [CI] 14.7–44.2%). The mean rate of infection across all sampling periods was 89.5% (95% CI 70.6–95.9). The mean dissemination rate across sampling intervals was 43.4% (95% CI 24.3–64.2%). The mean TR and TE across all mosquito sampling time intervals were 65.3 (95% CI 28.6–93.5) and 74.6 (95% CI 52.1–89.4). The IR was 100%, 79.3%, 78.6% and 100% respectively at 7, 14, 21 and 28 dpi. The DR was the highest at 7 dpi with 76.0%, followed by 28 dpi at 57.1%, 21 dpi at 27.3% and 14 dpi at the lowest DR of 13.04%. DE was 76%, 13.8%, 25%, 57.1% and TR was 79%, 50%, 57.1% and 75% at 7, 14, 21 and 28 dpi respectively. The TE was the highest at 28 dpi, with a proportion of 85.7%. For 7, 14 and 21 dpi the transmission efficiency was 72.0%, 65.5% and 75.0% respectively.
Conclusion
Anopheles stephensi is a competent vector for ONNV and being an invasive species spreading to different parts of the world will likely spread the virus to other regions.
Graphical Abstract
Funder
Swedish Research Council grant
Basic Science-Oriented Biotechnology Research Grant at the Faculty of Medicine, Umeå University
Formas grant
Umea University
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Parasitology