Culex torrentium Mosquito Role as Major Enzootic Vector Defined by Rate of Sindbis Virus Infection, Sweden, 2009 - Volume 21, Number 5—May 2015 - Emerging Infectious Disease journal - CDC
Volume 21, Number 5—May 2015
Dispatch
Culex torrentium Mosquito Role as Major Enzootic Vector Defined by Rate of Sindbis Virus Infection, Sweden, 2009
On This Page
Jenny C. Hesson , Jenny Verner-Carlsson, Anders Larsson, Raija Ahmed, Åke Lundkvist, and Jan O. Lundström
Abstract
We isolated Sindbis virus (SINV) from the enzootic mosquito vectors Culex torrentium, Cx. pipiens, andCuliseta morsitans collected in an area of Sweden where SINV disease is endemic. The infection rate in Cx. torrentium mosquitoes was exceptionally high (36 infections/1,000 mosquitoes), defining Cx. torrentium as the main enzootic vector of SINV in Scandinavia.
In Sweden, Finland, Russia, and South Africa, Sindbis virus (SINV; family Togaviridae, genus Alphavirus) is an etiologic agent for outbreaks of rash and long-lasting polyarthritis (1). Ecologically, SINV is a zoonotic mosquitoborne virus that naturally circulates in bird populations but only incidentally infects humans (1). Previous detections and isolations of SINV from field-collected mosquitoes identified the ornithophilic mosquitoes Culex pipiens/Cx. torrentium and Culiseta morsitans as possible enzootic vectors of SINV and the generalist mosquitoes Aedes cinereus and Ae. rossicus, which feed on birds and humans, as potential bridge vectors for transmission of the virus from viremic birds to humans (2,3; J.C. Hesson, J.O. Lundström, unpub. data). However, female Cx. torrentium and Cx. pipiens mosquitoes are morphologically indistinguishable, so all previous virus isolates from these species were from pools that may have contained both species. The distinction between Cx. torrentium and Cx. pipiens is necessary because vector competence experiments show great differences between the capacities of the 2 species to become infected with and to transmit SINV (4,5). Cx. torrentium is highly superior to Cx. pipiens as a vector of SINV in the laboratory (4,5), but the extent to which the 2 species are infected in nature is unclear.
We determined the natural SINV infection rates (IRs) in Culex mosquitoes, which were identified by using a newly developed molecular method for reliable identification of Cx. torrentium and Cx. pipiens mosquitoes (6). We also studied the simultaneous occurrence of SINV in Cs. morsitans mosquitoes.
Dr. Hesson is a researcher at Uppsala University in Sweden. Her primary research interests are mosquito-borne human pathogens, especially the effect of mosquito ecology on virus transmission.
Acknowledgments
We are grateful to Pernilla Wahlqvist for collecting and identifying mosquitoes and to the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences and the Zoological Foundation for financial support.
The phylogenetic computations were performed on resources provided by Swedish National Infrastructure for Computing through Uppsala Multidisciplinary Center for Advanced Computational Science (project p2009050).
References
- Lundström JO. Mosquito-borne viruses in Western Europe: a review. J Vector Ecol. 1999;24:1–39.PubMed
- Francy DB, Jaenson TG, Lundström JO, Schildt EB, Espmark Å, Henriksson B, Ecologic studies of mosquitoes and birds as hosts of Ockelbo virus in Sweden and isolation of Inkoo and Batai viruses from mosquitoes. Am J Trop Med Hyg. 1989;41:355–63 .PubMed
- Jöst H, Bialonski A, Storch V, Gunther S, Becker N, Schmidt-Chanasit J. Isolation and phylogenetic analysis of Sindbis viruses from mosquitoes in Germany. J Clin Microbiol. 2010;48:1900–3. DOIPubMed
- Lundström JO, Niklasson B, Francy DB. Swedish Culex torrentium and Cx. pipiens (Diptera: Culicidae) as experimental vectors of Ockelbo virus. J Med Entomol. 1990;27:561–3. DOIPubMed
- Lundström JO, Turell MJ, Niklasson B. Effect of environmental temperature on the vector competence of Culex pipiens and Cx. torrentium for Ockelbo virus. Am J Trop Med Hyg. 1990;43:534–42 .PubMed
- Hesson JC, Lundström JO, Halvarsson P, Erixon P, Collado A. A sensitive and reliable restriction enzyme method to distinguish between the mosquitoes Culex torrentium and Culex pipiens. Med Vet Entomol. 2010;24:142–9. DOIPubMed
- Lundström JO, Schäfer ML, Hesson JC, Wahlqvist P, Halling A, Hagelin A, The geographic distribution of mosquito species in Sweden. Journal of the European Mosquito Control Association. 2013;31:21–35.
- Lundström JO, Pfeffer M. Phylogeographic structure and evolutionary history of Sindbis virus. Vector Borne Zoonotic Dis. 2010;10:889–907.DOIPubMed
- McIntosh BM, Jupp PG, Dos Santos I. Infection by Sindbis and West Nile viruses in wild populations of Culex (Culex) univittatus Theobold (Diptera: Culicidae) in South Africa. Journal of the Entomological Society of South Africa. 1978;41:57–61.
- Samina I, Margalit J, Peleg J. Isolation of viruses from mosquitoes of the Negev, Israel. Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg. 1986;80:471–2. DOIPubMed
- Wills WM, Jacob WL, Francy DB, Oertley RE, Anani E, Calisher CH, Sindbis virus isolations from Saudi Arabian mosquitoes. Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg. 1985;79:63–6. DOIPubMed
- Hesson JC, Rettich F, Merdic E, Vignjević G, Östman Ö, Schäfer M, The arbovirus vector Culex torrentium is more prevalent than the sibling speciesCulex pipiens in north and central Europe. Med Vet Entomol. 2014;28:179–86. DOIPubMed
- Hesson JC, Östman Ö, Schäfer M, Lundström JO. Geographic distribution and relative abundance of the sibling vector species Culex torrentium andCulex pipiens in Sweden. Vector Borne Zoonotic Dis. 2011;11:1383–9. DOIPubMed
- Jöst H, Bürck-Kammerer S, Hütter G, Lattwein E, Litzba N, Bock-Hensley O, Medical importance of Sindbis virus in south-west Germany. J Clin Virol.2011;52:278–9. DOIPubMed
Figure
Tables
Suggested citation for this article: Hesson JC, Verner-Carlsson J, Larsson A, Ahmed R, Lundkvist A, Lundström JO. Culex torrentium mosquito role as major enzootic vector defined by rate of Sindbis virus infection, Sweden, 2009. Emerg Infect Dis. 2015 May [date cited].http://dx.doi.org/10.3201/eid2105.141577
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario