Mosquito-Borne Human Viral Diseases: Why Aedes aegypti?

被引:107
作者
Powell, Jeffrey R. [1 ]
机构
[1] Yale Univ, 21 Sachem St, New Haven, CT 05620 USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
YELLOW-FEVER; CHIKUNGUNYA VIRUS; DENGUE VIRUS; ZIKA VIRUS; EPIDEMIOLOGY; EMERGENCE; EVOLUTION; AFRICA; SPREAD; VECTOR;
D O I
10.4269/ajtmh.17-0866
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Although numerous viruses are transmitted by mosquitoes, four have caused the most human suffering over the centuries and continuing today. These are the viruses causing yellow fever, dengue, chikungunya, and Zika fevers. Africa is clearly the ancestral home of yellow fever, chikungunya, and Zika viruses and likely the dengue virus. Several species of mosquitoes, primarily in the genus Aedes, have been transmitting these viruses and their direct ancestors among African primates for millennia allowing for coadaptation among viruses, mosquitoes, and primates. One African primate (humans) and one African Aedes mosquito (Aedes aegypti) have escaped Africa and spread around the world. Thus it is not surprising that this native African mosquito is the most efficient vector of these native African viruses to this native African primate. This makes it likely that when the next disease-causing virus comes out of Africa, Ae. aegypti will be the major vector to humans.
引用
收藏
页码:1563 / 1565
页数:3
相关论文
共 40 条
[1]   The Southern Route "Out of Africa": Evidence for an Early Expansion of Modern Humans into Arabia [J].
Armitage, Simon J. ;
Jasim, Sabah A. ;
Marks, Anthony E. ;
Parker, Adrian G. ;
Usik, Vitaly I. ;
Uerpmann, Hans-Peter .
SCIENCE, 2011, 331 (6016) :453-456
[2]   Yellow fever: A disease that has yet to be conquered [J].
Barrett, Alan D. T. ;
Higgs, Stephen .
ANNUAL REVIEW OF ENTOMOLOGY, 2007, 52 :209-229
[3]   HUMAN IMPACTS HAVE SHAPED HISTORICAL AND RECENT EVOLUTION IN AEDES AEGYPTI, THE DENGUE AND YELLOW FEVER MOSQUITO [J].
Brown, Julia E. ;
Evans, Benjamin R. ;
Zheng, Wei ;
Obas, Vanessa ;
Barrera-Martinez, Laura ;
Egizi, Andrea ;
Zhao, Hongyu ;
Caccone, Adalgisa ;
Powell, Jeffrey R. .
EVOLUTION, 2014, 68 (02) :514-525
[4]   Out of Africa: A molecular perspective on the introduction of yellow fever virus into the Americas [J].
Bryant, Juliet E. ;
Holmes, Edward C. ;
Barrett, Alan D. T. .
PLOS PATHOGENS, 2007, 3 (05) :668-673
[5]  
CACCONE A, 1989, EVOLUTION, V43, P925, DOI 10.1111/j.1558-5646.1989.tb02540.x
[6]   Population genomics reveals that an anthropophilic population of Aedes aegypti mosquitoes in West Africa recently gave rise to American and Asian populations of this major disease vector [J].
Crawford, Jacob E. ;
Alves, Joel M. ;
Palmer, William J. ;
Day, Jonathan P. ;
Sylla, Massamba ;
Ramasamy, Ranjan ;
Surendran, Sinnathamby N. ;
Black, William C. ;
Pain, Arnab ;
Jiggins, Francis M. .
BMC BIOLOGY, 2017, 15
[7]   ZIKA VIRUS .1. ISOLATIONS AND SEROLOGICAL SPECIFICITY [J].
DICK, GWA ;
KITCHEN, SF ;
HADDOW, AJ .
TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF TROPICAL MEDICINE AND HYGIENE, 1952, 46 (05) :509-520
[8]  
Eltis D, 2010, ATLAS TRANSATLATIC S
[9]   Quantitative real-time PCR detection of Zika virus and evaluation with field-caught Mosquitoes [J].
Faye, Oumar ;
Faye, Ousmane ;
Diallo, Diawo ;
Diallo, Mawlouth ;
Weidmann, Manfred ;
Sall, Amadou Alpha .
VIROLOGY JOURNAL, 2013, 10
[10]   Phylogenetic relationships of flaviviruses correlate with their epidemiology, disease association and biogeography [J].
Gaunt, MW ;
Sall, AA ;
de Lamballerie, X ;
Falconar, AKI ;
Dzhivanian, TI ;
Gould, EA .
JOURNAL OF GENERAL VIROLOGY, 2001, 82 :1867-1876