Chikungunya virus: Evolution and genetic determinants of emergence
Autor(es)Tsetsarkin Konstantin A, Chen Rubing, Sherman Michael B, Weaver Scott C
ResumoChikungunya virus (CHIKV) causes a severe - often persistent arthralgic disease that is occasionally fatal. A mosquito-borne virus, CHIKV exists in enzootic, non-human primate cycles in Africa, but occasionally emerges into urban, human cycles to cause major epidemics. Between 1920 - 1950, - again in 2005, CHIKV emerged into India - Southeast Asia, where major urban epidemics ensued. Unlike the early introduction, the 2005 emergence was accompanied by an adaptive mutation that allowed CHIKV to exploit a new epidemic vector, Aedes albopictus, via an A226V substitution in the E1 envelope glycoprotein. However, recent reverse genetic studies indicate that lineage-specific epistatic restrictions can prevent this from exerting its phenotype on mosquito infectivity. Thus, the A. albopictus-adaptive A226V substitution that is facilitating the dramatic geographic spread CHIKV epidemics, was prevented for decades or longer from being selected in most African enzootic strains as well as in the older endemic Asian lineage.
ImprentaCurrent Opinion in Virology, v. 1, n. 4, p. 310-317, 2011
Identificador do Objeto Digital10.1016/j.coviro.2011.07.004
DescritoresChikungunya virus - Pathogenesis ; Chikungunya virus - Viral infections ; Chikungunya Virus - Virus ; Chikungunya virus - Transmission ; Chikungunya virus - Epidemic ; Chikungunya virus - Epidemiology ; Chikungunya virus - Public health
Data de Publicação:2011