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Differential intra-host infection kinetics in Aedes aegypti underlie superior transmissibility of African relative to Asian Zika virus
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Metadata
Document Title
Differential intra-host infection kinetics in Aedes aegypti underlie superior transmissibility of African relative to Asian Zika virus
Author
Phengchat R. Pakparnich P. Pethrak C. Pengon J. Sartsanga C. Chotiwan N. Uppakara K. Suksirisawat K. Lambrechts L. Jupatanakul N.
Affiliations
National Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (BIOTEC) Khlong Luang Pathum Thani Thailand; Chakri Naruebodindra Medical Institute Faculty of Medicine Ramathibodi Hospital Mahidol University Samut Prakan Thailand; Institut Pasteur Universit? Paris Cit? CNRS UMR2000 Insect-Virus Interactions Unit Paris France
Type
Article
Source Title
mSphere
ISSN
23795042
Year
2023
Volume
8
Issue
6
Open Access
All Open Access Gold Green
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
DOI
10.1128/msphere.00545-23
Abstract
Despite numerous studies highlighting the higher transmissibility of the African Zika virus (ZIKV) lineage compared to the Asian lineage in mosquito vectors little is known about how the viruses interact with different tissues during the early steps of mosquito infection. To address this gap we aimed to characterize intra-host infection barriers by combining tissue-level monitoring of infection using plaque assays and a novel quantitative analysis of single-cell-level infection kinetics by in situ immunofluorescent staining. Our results revealed that in Aedes aegypti an African ZIKV strain exhibited a higher replication rate across various tissues than an Asian ZIKV strain. This difference was potentially due to a higher virus production in individual cells faster spread within tissues or a combination of both factors. Furthermore we observed that higher blood meal titers resulted in a faster viral spread to neighboring cells suggesting that intra-host infection dynamics depend on inoculum size. We also identified a significant bottleneck during midgut infection establishment for both ZIKV lineages with only a small percentage of the virus population successfully initiating infection. Finally the in situ immunofluorescent staining technique enabled the examination of virus infection characteristics in different cell types and revealed heterogeneity in viral replication. Together these findings demonstrate that differences in intra-host infection kinetics underlie differential transmissibility between African and Asian ZIKV lineages. This information could serve as a starting point to further investigate the underlying mechanisms and ultimately inform the development of alternative control strategies. Copyright ? 2023 Phengchat et al.
Keyword
arbovirus | infection kinetics | midgut infection barrier | Transmission | Zika