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Bloodmeals fuel dengue virus replication in the female mosquito Aedes aegypti .

Yu-Ning HuangKuan-Ying LeeShin-Hong ShiaoChun-Hong ChenGuann-Yi YuMing-Jiun Yu
Published in: Journal of virology (2024)
Through evolution, the mosquito-borne viruses have adapted to the blood-feeding behaviors of their opportunist hosts to fulfill a complete lifecycle in humans and mosquitos. Disruption in the mosquitos' ability to host these viruses offers strategies to prevent diseases caused by them. With the advent of genomic tools, we discovered that dengue virus (DENV) benefited from the female mosquitos' bloodmeals for metabolic and energetic supplies for replication. Chemical or genetic disruption in these supplies reduced DENV replication in the female mosquitos. Our discovery can be exploited to produce genetically modified mosquitos, in which DENV infection leads to disruption in the supplies and thereby reduces replication and transmission. Our discovery might be extrapolated to prevent mosquito-borne virus transmission and the diseases they cause.
Keyphrases
  • dengue virus
  • aedes aegypti
  • zika virus
  • small molecule
  • high throughput
  • copy number
  • genome wide
  • gene expression
  • dna methylation
  • single cell