Lwande Olivia Wesula, Venter Marietjie, Lutomiah Joel, Michuki George, Rumberia Cecilia, Gakuya Francis, Obanda Vincent, Tigoi Caroline, Odhiambo Collins, Nindo Fredrick, Symekher Samwel, Sang Rosemary
International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology, Nairobi, Kenya.
Department of Medical Virology, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, South Africa.
Parasit Vectors. 2014 Nov 28;7:542. doi: 10.1186/s13071-014-0542-2.
West Nile virus (WNV) has a wide geographical distribution and has been associated to cause neurological disease in humans and horses. Mosquitoes are the traditional vectors for WNV; however, the virus has also been isolated from tick species in North Africa and Europe which could be a means of introduction and spread of the virus over long distances through migratory birds. Although WNV has been isolated in mosquitoes in Kenya, paucity of genetic and pathogenicity data exists. We previously reported the isolation of WNV from ticks collected from livestock and wildlife in Ijara District of Kenya, a hotspot for arbovirus activity. Here we report the full genome sequence and phylogenetic investigation of their origin and relation to strains from other regions.
A total of 10,488 ticks were sampled from animal hosts, classified to species and processed in pools of up to eight ticks per pool. Virus screening was performed by cell culture, RT-PCR and sequencing. Phylogenetic analysis was carried out to determine the evolutionary relationships of our isolate.
Among other viruses, WNV was isolated from a pool of Rhipicephalus pulchellus sampled from cattle, sequenced and submitted to GenBank (Accession number: KC243146). Comparative analysis with 27 different strains revealed that our isolate belongs to lineage 1 and clustered relatively closely to isolates from North Africa and Europe, Russia and the United States. Overall, Bayesian analysis based on nucleotide sequences showed that lineage 1 strains including the Kenyan strain had diverged 200 years ago from lineage 2 strains of southern Africa. Ijara strain collected from a tick sampled on livestock was closest to another Kenyan strain and had diverged 20 years ago from strains detected in Morocco and Europe and 30 years ago from strains identified in the USA.
To our knowledge, this is the first characterized WNV strain isolated from R. pulchellus. The epidemiological role of this tick in WNV transmission and dissemination remains equivocal but presents tick verses mosquito virus transmission has been neglected. Genetic data of this strain suggest that lineage 1 strains from Africa could be dispersed through tick vectors by wild migratory birds to Europe and beyond.
西尼罗河病毒(WNV)具有广泛的地理分布,与人类和马匹的神经系统疾病有关。蚊子是WNV的传统传播媒介;然而,该病毒也已在北非和欧洲的蜱种中分离出来,这可能是病毒通过候鸟远距离传播和扩散的一种方式。尽管WNV已在肯尼亚的蚊子中分离出来,但遗传和致病性数据匮乏。我们之前报道过从肯尼亚伊贾拉区的家畜和野生动物身上采集的蜱中分离出WNV,该地区是虫媒病毒活动的热点地区。在此,我们报告其全基因组序列以及对其起源和与其他地区毒株关系的系统发育研究。
从动物宿主身上共采集了10488只蜱,分类到物种,并以每池最多8只蜱的方式进行处理。通过细胞培养、逆转录-聚合酶链反应(RT-PCR)和测序进行病毒筛查。进行系统发育分析以确定我们分离株的进化关系。
在其他病毒中,从一头牛身上采集的一组美丽扇头蜱中分离出WNV,进行测序并提交至GenBank(登录号:KC243146)。与27种不同毒株的比较分析表明,我们的分离株属于1型谱系,与来自北非、欧洲、俄罗斯和美国的分离株聚类相对较近。总体而言,基于核苷酸序列的贝叶斯分析表明,包括肯尼亚毒株在内的1型谱系毒株在200年前与南非的2型谱系毒株分化。从家畜身上采集的蜱中分离出的伊贾拉毒株与另一种肯尼亚毒株最接近,在20年前与在摩洛哥和欧洲检测到的毒株分化,在30年前与在美国鉴定出的毒株分化。
据我们所知,这是首次从美丽扇头蜱中分离出的具有特征的WNV毒株。这种蜱在WNV传播和扩散中的流行病学作用仍不明确,但表明蜱与蚊子之间的病毒传播一直被忽视。该毒株的遗传数据表明,来自非洲的1型谱系毒株可能通过野生候鸟的蜱媒介传播到欧洲及其他地区。