Mead D G, Maré C J, Ramberg F B
Department of Veterinary Science and Microbiology, University of Arizona, Tucson 85721, USA.
J Med Entomol. 1999 Jul;36(4):410-3. doi: 10.1093/jmedent/36.4.410.
Laboratory-reared female black flies (Simulium vittatum Zetterstedt) were infected experimentally with a 1997 vesicular stomatitis virus New Jersey serotype isolate and allowed to feed on susceptible laboratory mice. All mice exposed to black fly bite seroconverted by day 21 after infection, an indication of virus transmission. In addition, viral RNA was detected in the spleen of several mice. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that black flies are involved in VSV-NJ transmission during epizootics in the western USA and represent the 1st confirmed example of biological transmission of an arbovirus by a member of the Simuliidae using an animal model.
在实验室饲养的雌性黑蝇(Simulium vittatum Zetterstedt)被用1997年新泽西血清型水泡性口炎病毒分离株进行实验性感染,然后让它们叮咬易感的实验室小鼠。所有暴露于黑蝇叮咬的小鼠在感染后第21天血清转化,这表明病毒发生了传播。此外,在几只小鼠的脾脏中检测到了病毒RNA。这些发现与以下假设一致,即在美国西部动物疫病流行期间,黑蝇参与了VSV-NJ的传播,并且这是使用动物模型首次证实蚋科成员对虫媒病毒进行生物传播的例子。