Center for Global Health Science and Security, Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, D.C., USA.
Department of Pathobiological Sciences, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, USA.
Sci Data. 2022 Oct 19;9(1):634. doi: 10.1038/s41597-022-01741-4.
The growing threat of vector-borne diseases, highlighted by recent epidemics, has prompted increased focus on the fundamental biology of vector-virus interactions. To this end, experiments are often the most reliable way to measure vector competence (the potential for arthropod vectors to transmit certain pathogens). Data from these experiments are critical to understand outbreak risk, but - despite having been collected and reported for a large range of vector-pathogen combinations - terminology is inconsistent, records are scattered across studies, and the accompanying publications often share data with insufficient detail for reuse or synthesis. Here, we present a minimum data and metadata standard for reporting the results of vector competence experiments. Our reporting checklist strikes a balance between completeness and labor-intensiveness, with the goal of making these important experimental data easier to find and reuse in the future, without much added effort for the scientists generating the data. To illustrate the standard, we provide an example that reproduces results from a study of Aedes aegypti vector competence for Zika virus.
由近期流行病引发的不断增长的虫媒传染病威胁,促使人们更加关注媒介-病毒相互作用的基础生物学。为此,实验通常是衡量媒介获得性(节肢动物媒介传播某些病原体的潜力)的最可靠方法。这些实验数据对于了解疫情风险至关重要,但——尽管已经针对各种媒介-病原体组合进行了收集和报告——术语却不一致,记录分散在各个研究中,相关出版物通常提供的数据详细程度不足以重复使用或综合分析。在这里,我们提出了一个用于报告媒介获得性实验结果的最小数据和元数据标准。我们的报告清单在完整性和繁琐性之间取得了平衡,目标是使这些重要的实验数据更易于在未来找到和重复使用,而不会给生成数据的科学家增加太多的工作量。为了说明该标准,我们提供了一个重现埃及伊蚊对寨卡病毒媒介获得性研究结果的示例。