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Rift Valley fever virus: strategies for maintenance, survival and vertical transmission in mosquitoes

Journal

JOURNAL OF GENERAL VIROLOGY
Volume 98, Issue 5, Pages 875-887

Publisher

MICROBIOLOGY SOC
DOI: 10.1099/jgv.0.000765

Keywords

Rift Valley fever virus; arbovirus; mosquito; vector; vertical transmission; transovarian transmission

Funding

  1. Public Health England (PHE)
  2. University of Surrey
  3. UK Department for Food and Rural Affairs (Defra)
  4. Scottish Government [SC1402]
  5. Welsh Government [SC1402]

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Rift Valley fever virus (RVFV) is a mosquito-borne arbovirus causing severe disease in humans and ruminants. Spread of RVFV out of Africa has raised concerns that it could emerge in Europe or the USA. Virus persistence is dependent on successful infection of, replication in, and transmission to susceptible vertebrate and invertebrate hosts, modulated by virus-host and vector-virus interactions. The principal accepted theory for the long-term maintenance of RVFV involves vertical transmission (VT) of virus to mosquito progeny, with the virus surviving long inter-epizootic periods within the egg. This VT hypothesis, however, is yet to be comprehensively proven. Here, evidence for and against the VT of RVFV is reviewed along with the identification of factors limiting its detection in natural and experimental data. The observations of VT for other arboviruses in the genera Alphavirus, Flavivirus and Orthobunyavirus are discussed within the context of RVFV. The review concludes that VT of RVFV is likely but that current data are insufficient to irrefutably prove this hypothesis.

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