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Infection via mosquito bite alters Zika virus replication kinetics in rhesus macaques

Authors :
Shelby L. O’Connor
Andrea M. Weiler
Matthew R Semler
Matthew T. Aliota
Gabrielle L. Barry
Wendy Newton
Emma L. Mohr
Saverio Capuano
Nancy Schultz-Darken
Christina M. Newman
Katie Zarbock
Lalli J
David H. O’Connor
Mariel S. Mohns
Eric Peterson
Meghan E. Breitbach
Jorge E. Osorio
Michelle R Koenig
Thomas C. Friedrich
Laurel M. Stewart
Dawn M. Dudley
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2017.

Abstract

For more than three decades it has been recognized that small amounts of vector saliva can significantly alter the infectivity of vector-borne pathogens and subsequent in vivo dynamics. Mouse and nonhuman primate models now serve as useful platforms to study Zika virus (ZIKV) pathogenesis, candidate therapies, and vaccines, but they rely on needle inoculation of virus: the effects of mosquito-borne infection on disease outcome have not been explored in these models. To model vector-borne transmission of ZIKV in nonhuman primates, we infected Aedes aegypti mosquitoes with ZIKV and allowed them to feed on four ZIKV-naive rhesus macaques. We compared ZIKV replication kinetics and tissue distribution between animals that were subcutaneously inoculated with 104 plaque-forming units of ZIKV and those that were exposed via mosquito bite. Here, we show that infection via mosquito bite delays ZIKV replication to peak viral loads in rhesus macaques. Importantly, in mosquito-infected animals ZIKV tissue distribution was limited to hemolymphatic tissues, female reproductive tract tissues, kidney, and liver, potentially emulating key features of human ZIKV infections, most of which are characterized by mild or asymptomatic disease. This newly developed system will be valuable for studying ZIKV disease because it more closely mimics human infection by mosquito bite than needle-based inoculations.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c4f310dce62213b69c3b278eb5ffb1f5
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/186155