4.7 Article

Intrinsic variation in the vertically transmitted core virome of the mosquito Aedes aegypti

Journal

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
Volume 31, Issue 9, Pages 2545-2561

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mec.16412

Keywords

aedes aegypti; insect-specific virus; vertical transmisison; virome

Funding

  1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [U01CK000510]

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Virome studies have shown the presence of RNA viruses in animals, leading to a rethinking of the relationships between organisms and their microbiota. Mosquito viromes, especially those of Aedes aegypti, could potentially contain a core virome that impacts the basic biology of the host. This study investigated the virome composition in A. aegypti and found varying compositions across samples, suggesting the potential for a vertically maintained core virome.
Virome studies among metazoans have revealed the ubiquity of RNA viruses in animals, contributing to a fundamental rethinking of the relationships between organisms and their microbiota. Mosquito viromes, often scrutinized due to their public health relevance, may also provide insight into broadly applicable concepts, such as a core virome, a set of viruses consistently associated with a host species or population that may fundamentally impact its basic biology. A subset of mosquito-associated viruses (MAVs) could comprise such a core, and MAVs can be categorized as (i) arboviruses, which alternate between mosquito and vertebrate hosts, (ii) insect-specific viruses, which cannot replicate in vertebrate cells, and (iii) viruses with unknown specificity. MAVs have been widely characterized in the disease vector Aedes aegypti, and the occurrence of a core virome in this species has been proposed but remains unclear. Using a wild population previously surveyed for MAVs and a common laboratory strain, we investigated viromes in reproductive tissue via metagenomic RNA sequencing. Virome composition varied across samples, but four groups comprised >97% of virus sequences: a novel partiti-like virus (Partitiviridae), a toti-like virus (Totiviridae), unclassified Riboviria, and four orthomyxo-like viruses (Orthormyxoviridae). Whole or partial genomes for the partiti-like virus, toti-like virus, and one orthomyxo-like virus were assembled and analysed phylogenetically. Multigenerational maintenance of these MAVs was confirmed by RT-PCR, indicating vertical transmission as a mechanism for persistence. This study provides fundamental information regarding MAV ecology and variability in A. aegypti and the potential for vertically maintained core viromes at the population level.

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