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Mosquito saliva enhances virus infection through sialokinin-dependent vascular leakage

Authors :
Daniella A. Lefteri
Steven R. Bryden
Marieke Pingen
Sandra Terry
Ailish McCafferty
Emily F. Beswick
Georgi Georgiev
Marleen Van der Laan
Valeria Mastrullo
Paola Campagnolo
Robert M. Waterhouse
Margus Varjak
Andres Merits
Rennos Fragkoudis
Stephen Griffin
Kave Shams
Emilie Pondeville
Clive S. McKimmie
Source :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, vol. 119, no. 24, pp. e2114309119
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Viruses transmitted by Aedes mosquitoes are an increasingly important global cause of disease. Defining common determinants of host susceptibility to this large group of heterogenous pathogens is key for informing the rational design of panviral medicines. Infection of the vertebrate host with these viruses is enhanced by mosquito saliva, a complex mixture of salivary-gland-derived factors and microbiota. We show that the enhancement of infection by saliva was dependent on vascular function and was independent of most antisaliva immune responses, including salivary microbiota. Instead, the Aedes gene product sialokinin mediated the enhancement of virus infection through a rapid reduction in endothelial barrier integrity. Sialokinin is unique within the insect world as having a vertebrate-like tachykinin sequence and is absent from Anopheles mosquitoes , which are incompetent for most arthropod-borne viruses, whose saliva was not proviral and did not induce similar vascular permeability. Therapeutic strategies targeting sialokinin have the potential to limit disease severity following infection with Aedes -mosquito-borne viruses.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00278424
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, vol. 119, no. 24, pp. e2114309119
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2b791903ad8f28ff5ffa919132885371