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Vertical and Horizontal Transmission of Cell Fusing Agent Virus in Aedes aegypti

Logan, Rhiannon A. E.; Quek, Shannon; Muthoni, Joseph N.; von Eicken, Anneliese; Brettell, Laura E.; Anderson, Enyia R.; Villena, Marcus E. N.; Hegde, Shivanand; Patterson, Grace T.; Heinz, Eva; Hughes, Grant L.; Patterson, Edward I.

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Authors

Rhiannon A. E. Logan

Shannon Quek

Joseph N. Muthoni

Anneliese von Eicken

Enyia R. Anderson

Marcus E. N. Villena

Shivanand Hegde

Grace T. Patterson

Eva Heinz

Grant L. Hughes

Edward I. Patterson



Contributors

Karyn N. Johnson
Editor

Abstract

Cell fusing agent virus (CFAV) is an insect-specific flavivirus (ISF) found in Aedes aegypti mosquitoes. ISFs have demonstrated the ability to modulate the infection or transmission of arboviruses such as dengue, West Nile, and Zika viruses. It is thought that vertical transmission is the main route for ISF maintenance in nature. This has been observed with CFAV, but there is evidence of horizontal and venereal transmission in other ISFs. Understanding the route of transmission can inform strategies to spread ISFs to vector populations as a method of controlling pathogenic arboviruses. We crossed individually reared male and female mosquitoes from both a naturally occurring CFAV-positive Ae. aegypti colony and its negative counterpart to provide information on maternal, paternal, and horizontal transmission. RT-PCR was used to detect CFAV in individual female pupal exuviae and was 89% sensitive, but only 42% in male pupal exuviae. This is a possible way to screen individuals for infection without destroying the adults. Female-to-male horizontal transmission was not observed during this study. However, there was a 31% transmission rate from mating pairs of CFAV-positive males to negative female mosquitoes. Maternal vertical transmission was observed with a filial infection rate of 93%. The rate of paternal transmission was 85% when the female remained negative, 61% when the female acquired CFAV horizontally, and 76% overall. Maternal and paternal transmission of CFAV could allow the introduction of this virus into wild Ae. aegypti populations through male or female mosquito releases, and thus provides a potential strategy for ISF-derived arbovirus control.

Citation

Logan, R. A. E., Quek, S., Muthoni, J. N., von Eicken, A., Brettell, L. E., Anderson, E. R., …Patterson, E. I. (2022). Vertical and Horizontal Transmission of Cell Fusing Agent Virus in Aedes aegypti. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 88(18), https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.01062-22

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Aug 5, 2022
Publication Date Sep 22, 2022
Deposit Date Jan 26, 2024
Publicly Available Date Jan 30, 2024
Journal Applied and Environmental Microbiology
Print ISSN 0099-2240
Electronic ISSN 1098-5336
Publisher American Society for Microbiology
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 88
Issue 18
DOI https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.01062-22
Keywords Ecology; Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology; Food Science; Biotechnology

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