4.4 Article

Insect-specific flaviviruses, a worldwide widespread group of viruses only detected in insects

Journal

INFECTION GENETICS AND EVOLUTION
Volume 40, Issue -, Pages 381-388

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.meegid.2015.07.032

Keywords

Insect-specific flavivirus; Mosquito-only flavivirus; Mosquito; Sandfly; Cell fusing agent virus; Kamiti River virus; Culex flavivirus; Aedes flavivirus; Quang Binh virus; Ochlerotatus caspius flavivirus

Funding

  1. FCT/MCTES/PIDDAC, Portugal [UID/MULTI/04046/2013]
  2. [PTDC/SAU-SAP/119199/2010 FCT]
  3. Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia [PTDC/SAU-SAP/119199/2010] Funding Source: FCT

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Several flaviviruses are important pathogens for humans and animals (Dengue viruses, Japanese encephalitis virus, Yellow-fever virus, Tick-borne encephalitis virus, West Nile virus). In recent years, numerous novel and related flaviviruses without known pathogenic capacity have been isolated worldwide in the natural mosquito population. However, phylogenetic studies have shown that genomic sequences of these viruses diverge from other flaviviruses. Moreover, these viruses seem to be exclusive of insects (they do not seem to grow on vertebrate cell lines), and were already defined as mosquito-only flaviviruses or insect-specific flaviviruses. At least eleven of these viruses were isolated worldwide, and sequences ascribable to other eleven putative viruses were detected in several mosquito species. A large part of the cycle of these viruses is not well known, and their persistence in the environment is poorly understood. These viruses are detected in a wide variety of distinct mosquito species and also in sandflies and chironomids worldwide; a single virus, or the genetic material ascribable to a virus, was detected in several mosquito species in different countries, often in different continents. Furthermore, some of these viruses are carried by invasive mosquitoes, and do not seem to have a depressive action on their fitness. The global distribution and the continuous detection of new viruses in this group point out the likely underestimation of their number, and raise interesting issues about their possible interactions with the pathogenic flaviviruses, and their influence on the bionomics of arthropod hosts. Some enigmatic features, as their integration in the mosquito genome, the recognition of their genetic material in DNA forms in field-collected mosquitoes, or the detection of the same virus in both mosquitoes and sandflies, indicate that the cycle of these viruses has unknown characteristics that could be of use to reach a deeper understanding of the cycle of related pathogenic flaviviruses. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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