Determinants of Chikungunya and O’nyong-Nyong Virus Specificity for Infection of Aedes and Anopheles Mosquito Vectors
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Vectorial Systems of Arbovirus Transmission
1.1.1. Sympatric Distribution of Aedes and Anopheles but Differences in Pathogen Transmission
1.1.2. O’nyong-Nyong and Chikungunya, Two Closely Related Alphaviruses
1.2. Mosquito Intrinsic Factors and Virus Transmission
1.2.1. Aedes and Anopheles Genetics and Evolution
1.2.2. ONNV and CHIKV Genetics and Evolution
1.3. Vector–Virus Interactions
1.3.1. The Virus Cycle in the Mosquito Vector
Primary Midgut Infection
Midgut Escape Barrier
Viral Dissemination and Transmission
1.3.2. Mosquito Immunity and Antiviral Mechanisms
Mosquito Innate Immunity
Viral Tolerance
1.3.3. Viral Factors Underlying Host Specificity
1.4. Environmental and Human Host Factors
1.4.1. Biotic and Abiotic Factors Influencing Viral Transmission
Biotic Factors
Co-Infection with Other Pathogens
Superinfection Exclusion
Mosquito Virome
Mosquito Bacterial Microbiota
1.4.2. Abiotic Factors
Temperature and Weather
1.5. Role of Human Hosts
Host Population Genetics
2. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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A. Viral comparisons | |||
ONNV | CHIKV | ||
Viral classification | Family | Togaviridae | |
Genus | Alphavirus | ||
Antigenic complex group | Semliki forest complex | ||
Viral genome | Group | Baltimore group IV | |
Type | ssRNA (+) | ||
Nucleic sequences | 76.48% identity with 93% of coverage | ||
Mutation rate | CHIKV: average estimation of 4.33 × 10−4 nucleotide substitutions per site per year [9] ONNV: no estimation | ||
Viral cycle in cells | similar; same viral proteins harbor similar functions | ||
Geographic distribution | Sub-Saharan region (Africa) | ||
Protein sequence | Opal-to-Arg codon between nsP3 and nsP4 | Equilibrium of Opal-to-Arg codon [10,11] | Minority of Arg codon [12,13] |
Geographic distribution | Restricted to Africa | Found in four continents (America, Africa, Europe and Asia | |
Mortality rate in patients | not reported | 0,1% of cases [14] | |
Vectors used for transmission | Anopheles funestus Anopheles gambiae Aedes aegypti [15] Mansonia uniformis [11] | Aedes aegypt Aedes albopictus | |
B. Mosquito vector comparisons | |||
Anopheles gambiae | Aedes aegypti | ||
Behavioral traits | Blood feeding preferences | Anthropophilic | |
Blood feeding time | Crepuscular or nocturnal | ||
Blood feeding places | Endophilic | ||
Developmental stages | Laying sites | Clear, unpolluted, fresh or salt water | Walls of water containers |
Larval habitats | Rice fields or flooded areas | Tires, bowls, cups, natural basins | |
Climate preference | Predominant during dry season [16] | Predominant beginning of the rainy season [17] | |
Genome | Genome size | 278 Mb [18] | 1380 Mb [19] |
Chromosome length | Shorter | 2.3 times longer [20] | |
Transposable element composition | 16% of the genome [18] | 50% of the genome [21] | |
Transposable element localisation | Pericentromeric heterochromatin | Euchromatin | |
Protein orthology | 67% [19] | ||
Number of orthologs | 2000 [19] | ||
Geographic distribution | Sahara, Northern Europe, Northern Asia | Northern Africa, Australia | |
America, South and Sub-Saharan Africa, West and East Asia Western Europe | |||
Pathogens transmission | Parasites | Plasmodium spp. | / |
Wuchereria bancrofti [22,23] | |||
Viruses | ONNV | Flaviviruses Alphaviruses Phleboviruses Orthobuynyaviruses | |
C. Vectorial system comparison | |||
ONNV/Anopheles gambiae | CHIKV/Aedes aegypti | ||
Extrinsic incubation period | Passage of the Midgut barrier | 3 days post infection [24] | Before 2 days post infection [25,26,27,28] |
In salivary glands | 7 days post infection [24] | 2 to 3 days post infection [25,26,27,28] | |
Receptors for viral entry | Putative receptors | 230 kDa Cadherin and Rab5 ortholog could be involved in ONNV entry [29] | 38 kDa and 60 kDa protein at the membrane brush border of the midgut [30] |
Lectins and prohibitins [29,30,31] | |||
Attachment factors | Glycoaminoglycans [31] | ||
Antiviral immunity | RNA interference | siRNA, piRNA and miRNA | |
Toll pathway | Inhibited by virus Repress viral dissemination [24] | Inhibited by virus and no antiviral response [32] | |
IMD pathway | Inhibited by virus Protective against ONNV midgut infection (with Rel2-F) [24] | Inhibited by virus and no antiviral response [32] | |
JAK/STAT pathway | Inhibited by virus Protective against ONNV midgut infection [24] | Inhibited by virus and no antiviral response [32] | |
JNK pathway | No evidence | Antiviral response [33] | |
Complement-like pathway | APL1A, APL1C and LRIM4 [24] | TEP20 [33] | |
AMP | / | Cecropin-like peptide [34] | |
Microbiota | These viruses require enteric microbiome [24,35,36] |
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Cottis, S.; Blisnick, A.A.; Failloux, A.-B.; Vernick, K.D. Determinants of Chikungunya and O’nyong-Nyong Virus Specificity for Infection of Aedes and Anopheles Mosquito Vectors. Viruses 2023, 15, 589. https://doi.org/10.3390/v15030589
Cottis S, Blisnick AA, Failloux A-B, Vernick KD. Determinants of Chikungunya and O’nyong-Nyong Virus Specificity for Infection of Aedes and Anopheles Mosquito Vectors. Viruses. 2023; 15(3):589. https://doi.org/10.3390/v15030589
Chicago/Turabian StyleCottis, Solène, Adrien A. Blisnick, Anna-Bella Failloux, and Kenneth D. Vernick. 2023. "Determinants of Chikungunya and O’nyong-Nyong Virus Specificity for Infection of Aedes and Anopheles Mosquito Vectors" Viruses 15, no. 3: 589. https://doi.org/10.3390/v15030589
APA StyleCottis, S., Blisnick, A. A., Failloux, A. -B., & Vernick, K. D. (2023). Determinants of Chikungunya and O’nyong-Nyong Virus Specificity for Infection of Aedes and Anopheles Mosquito Vectors. Viruses, 15(3), 589. https://doi.org/10.3390/v15030589