Cunha Marcela S, Costa Pedro A G, Correa Isadora Alonso, de Souza Marcos R M, Calil Pedro Teles, da Silva Gustavo P Duarte, Costa Sara Mesquita, Fonseca Vinícius Wakoff P, da Costa Luciana J
Departamento de Virologia, Instituto de Microbiologia Paulo de Góes, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Front Microbiol. 2020 Jun 26;11:1297. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2020.01297. eCollection 2020.
Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) is an arthropod-borne virus (arbovirus) of epidemic concern, transmitted by ssp. mosquitoes, and is the etiologic agent of a febrile and incapacitating arthritogenic illness responsible for millions of human cases worldwide. After major outbreaks starting in 2004, CHIKV spread to subtropical areas and western hemisphere coming from sub-Saharan Africa, South East Asia, and the Indian subcontinent. Even though CHIKV disease is self-limiting and non-lethal, more than 30% of the infected individuals will develop chronic disease with persistent severe joint pain, tenosynovitis, and incapacitating polyarthralgia that can last for months to years, negatively impacting an individual's quality of life and socioeconomic productivity. The lack of specific drugs or licensed vaccines to treat or prevent CHIKV disease associated with the global presence of the mosquito vector in tropical and temperate areas, representing a possibility for CHIKV to continually spread to different territories, make this virus an agent of public health burden. In South America, where Dengue virus is endemic and Zika virus was recently introduced, the impact of the expansion of CHIKV infections, and co-infection with other arboviruses, still needs to be estimated. In Brazil, the recent spread of the East/Central/South Africa (ECSA) and Asian genotypes of CHIKV was accompanied by a high morbidity rate and acute cases of abnormal disease presentation and severe neuropathies, which is an atypical outcome for this infection. In this review, we will discuss what is currently known about CHIKV epidemics, clinical manifestations of the human disease, the basic concepts and recent findings in the mechanisms underlying virus-host interaction, and CHIKV-induced chronic disease for both and models of infection. We aim to stimulate scientific debate on how the characterization of replication, host-cell interactions, and the pathogenic potential of the new epidemic viral strains can contribute as potential developments in the virology field and shed light on strategies for disease control.
基孔肯雅病毒(CHIKV)是一种备受关注的节肢动物传播病毒(虫媒病毒),由特定种类的蚊子传播,是一种发热性和使人衰弱的致关节炎疾病的病原体,全球有数百万人类病例。自2004年开始出现重大疫情后,CHIKV从撒哈拉以南非洲、东南亚和印度次大陆传播到亚热带地区和西半球。尽管CHIKV疾病是自限性且非致命的,但超过30%的感染者会发展为慢性病,伴有持续的严重关节疼痛、腱鞘炎和使人衰弱的多关节痛,可持续数月至数年,对个人生活质量和社会经济生产力产生负面影响。由于缺乏治疗或预防CHIKV疾病的特效药物或许可疫苗,且热带和温带地区存在全球范围的蚊媒,这意味着CHIKV有可能持续传播到不同地区,使其成为公共卫生负担的一个因素。在登革热病毒为地方病且最近引入了寨卡病毒的南美洲,CHIKV感染扩大以及与其他虫媒病毒共同感染的影响仍有待评估。在巴西,CHIKV东非/中非/南非(ECSA)基因型和亚洲基因型最近的传播伴随着高发病率以及疾病表现异常和严重神经病变的急性病例,这对于这种感染来说是不典型的结果。在本综述中,我们将讨论目前已知的CHIKV疫情、人类疾病的临床表现、病毒 - 宿主相互作用机制的基本概念和最新发现,以及针对人和动物感染模型的CHIKV诱导的慢性病。我们旨在激发关于新流行病毒株的复制特征、宿主细胞相互作用和致病潜力的表征如何能够促进病毒学领域潜在发展并阐明疾病控制策略的科学辩论。