4.6 Article

EHDV-2 Infection Prevalence Varies in Culicoides sonorensis after Feeding on Infected White-Tailed Deer over the Course of Viremia

Journal

VIRUSES-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v11040371

Keywords

Culicoides sonorensis; epizootic hemorrhagic disease virus; hemorrhagic disease; Odocoileus virginianus; orbivirus; white-tailed deer

Categories

Funding

  1. Kansas Bioscience Authority through the Center of Excellence for Emerging and Zoonotic Animal Diseases at Kansas State University
  2. USDA, Agricultural Research Service [3020-32000-010-00D]
  3. Federal Aid to Wildlife Restoration Act (50 Stat. 917)
  4. USDA-APHIS-VS [AP17VSSPRS00C045]
  5. National Institutes of Health, National Institute of General Medical Sciences [GM109435]
  6. SCWDS member state wildlife agencies

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Epizootic hemorrhagic disease viruses (EHDVs) are arboviral pathogens of white-tailed deer and other wild and domestic ruminants in North America. Transmitted by various species of Culicoides, EHDVs circulate wherever competent vectors and susceptible ruminant host populations co-exist. The impact of variation in the level and duration of EHDV viremia in white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) on Culicoides infection prevalence is not well characterized. Here we examined how infection prevalence in a confirmed North American vector of EHDV-2 (Culicoides sonorensis) varies in response to fluctuations in deer viremia. To accomplish this, five white-tailed deer were experimentally infected with EHDV-2 and colonized C. sonorensis were allowed to feed on deer at 3, 5, 7, 10, 12, 14, 18, and 24 days post infection (dpi). Viremia profiles in deer were determined by virus isolation and titration at the same time points. Blood-fed Culicoides were assayed for virus after a 10-day incubation (27 degrees C) period. We found that increases in deer EHDV blood titers significantly increased both the likelihood that midges would successfully acquire EHDV and the proportion of midges that reached the titer threshold for transmission competence. Unexpectedly, we identified four infected midge samples (three individuals and one pool) after feeding on one deer 18 and 24 dpi, when viremia was no longer detectable by virus isolation. The ability of ruminants with low-titer viremia to serve as a source of EHDV for blood-feeding Culicoides should be explored further to better understand its potential epidemiological significance.

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