Jamestown Canyon virus (Bunyavirales: Peribunyaviridae) vector ecology in a focus of human transmission in New Hampshire, USA.

IF 2.1 3区 农林科学 Q1 ENTOMOLOGY Journal of Medical Entomology Pub Date : 2023-07-12 DOI:10.1093/jme/tjad046
Joseph D Poggi, Colin Conery, Abigail Mathewson, Denise Bolton, Rebecca Lovell, Laura C Harrington, Marco Notarangelo
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Abstract

Jamestown Canyon virus disease (JCVD) is a potentially neuroinvasive condition caused by the arbovirus Jamestown Canyon virus (JCV). Human cases of JCVD have increased in New Hampshire (NH) over the past decade, but vector surveillance is limited by funding and person power. We conducted mosquito surveillance with a focus on human JCVD cases south central NH during 2021. Routine surveillance with CDC miniature traps baited with CO2 (lights removed) was supplemented by a paired trapping design to test the collection efficiency of octenol, and New Jersey light traps. We performed virus testing, blood meal analysis, and compared morphological identification with DNA barcoding. Over 50,000 mosquitoes were collected representing 28 species. Twelve JCV-positive pools were derived from 6 species of more than 1,600 pools tested. Of those, Aedes excrucians/stimulans (MLE 4.95, Diptera: Culicidae, Walker, 1856, 1848), and Aedes sticticus (MLE 2.02, Meigen, 1838) had the highest JCV infection rates, and Aedes canadensis (MLE 0.13, Theobold, 1901) and Coquillettidia perturbans (0.10, Diptera: Culicidae, Walker, 1856) had the lowest infection rates. One hundred and fifty-one blood meals were matched to a vertebrate host. All putative vectors fed on the amplifying host of JCV, white-tailed deer (36-100% of bloodmeals). Putative vectors that fed on human hosts included Aedes excrucians (8%), Anopheles punctipennis (25%, Diptera: Culicidae, Say, 1823), and Coquillettidia perturbans (51%). CDC traps baited with CO2 were effective for collecting putative vectors. DNA barcoding enhanced morphological identifications of damaged specimens. We present the first ecological overview of JCV vectors in NH.

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美国新罕布什尔州人类传播中心的詹姆斯敦峡谷病毒(Bunyavirales: Peribunyaviridae)病媒生态学。
詹姆斯敦峡谷病毒病(JCVD)是由虫媒病毒詹姆斯敦峡谷病毒(JCV)引起的一种潜在的神经侵入性疾病。在过去十年中,新罕布什尔州(NH)的詹姆斯敦峡谷病毒病人类病例有所增加,但病媒监测却受到资金和人力的限制。2021 年,我们对新罕布什尔州中南部的人类 JCVD 病例进行了蚊虫监测。在使用以二氧化碳为诱饵的疾控中心微型诱捕器(除去灯光)进行常规监测的同时,我们还采用了配对诱捕设计,以测试辛烯醇和新泽西灯光诱捕器的收集效率。我们进行了病毒检测、血粉分析,并将形态鉴定与 DNA 条形码进行了比较。我们收集了代表 28 个物种的 50,000 多只蚊子。在测试的 1,600 多个蚊子池中,有 6 个物种产生了 12 个 JCV 阳性蚊子池。其中,库氏伊蚊(MLE 4.95,双翅目:库蚊科,Walker, 1856, 1848)和斯特克伊蚊(MLE 2.02,Meigen, 1838)的 JCV 感染率最高,加拿大伊蚊(MLE 0.13, Theobold, 1901) 和 Coquillettidia perturbans (0.10, Diptera: Culicidae, Walker, 1856) 的感染率最低。有 151 份血餐与脊椎动物宿主相匹配。所有假定的病媒都以 JCV 的扩增宿主白尾鹿为食(36-100% 的血餐)。以人类宿主为食的假定病媒包括伊蚊(8%)、点刺按蚊(25%,双翅目:库蚊科,Say,1823 年)和孔雀蝇(Coquillettidia perturbans,51%)。以二氧化碳为诱饵的 CDC 诱捕器可有效收集推定的病媒。DNA 条形码增强了对受损标本的形态鉴定。我们首次对新罕布什尔州的 JCV 向量进行了生态学概述。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
14.30%
发文量
207
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Medical Entomology is published bimonthly in January, March, May, July, September, and November. The journal publishes reports on all phases of medical entomology and medical acarology, including the systematics and biology of insects, acarines, and other arthropods of public health and veterinary significance. In addition to full-length research articles, the journal publishes Reviews, interpretive articles in a Forum section, Short Communications, and Letters to the Editor.
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