Brüssow Harald, Figuerola Jordi
Department of Biosystems, Laboratory of Gene Technology, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.
Department of Global Change and Conservation, Estación Biológica de Doñana-CSIC, Sevilla, Spain.
Microb Biotechnol. 2025 Mar;18(3):e70120. doi: 10.1111/1751-7915.70120.
West Nile virus (WNV) disease, a mosquito-transmitted Flavivirus infection, represents a substantial public health research interest. This virus was unknown in the Western hemisphere until it was introduced in 1999 into an immunologically naïve population. WNV caused an epizootic and epidemic in New York City. The infection then swept over North America, causing mass mortality in birds and cumulatively 60,000 human cases, half of whom were hospitalised, mostly with neurological symptoms. The virus closely resembled a goose virus isolated in Israel in 1998. Mosquitoes of the genus Culex were identified as the insect viral vectors. WNV can infect more than 300 bird species, but in the US, the American robin (Turdus migratorius) represented the ecologically most important bird viral reservoir. Mosquito-to-mosquito viral transmission might amplify the viral spread, and iatrogenic WNV transmission was also observed, leading to the screening of blood products. Compared with African WNV isolates, the New York WNV isolate NY99 showed a mutation in the nonstructural protein NS3 that increased its virulence in birds and was also observed in WNV outbreaks from Romania in 1996 and from Russia in 1999. During its spread across the US, NY99 acquired a mutation in the envelope gene E that favoured viral infection in the insect vector. Europe reported 1200 annual WNV cases in 2024, with a focus in Mediterranean countries, but a northward spread of the infection to Germany and The Netherlands was also noted. Global warming is likely to affect the geographical distribution of vector-borne infections such that people living in temperate climate areas might be increasingly exposed to these infections. Therefore, research on temperature effects on WNV transmission by Culex mosquitoes has become a recent focus of research. Pertinent climate aspects of WNV infections are retraced in the present review.
西尼罗河病毒(WNV)病是一种由蚊子传播的黄病毒感染病,引起了公共卫生研究领域的广泛关注。该病毒在1999年传入西半球之前,在当地尚不为人知。WNV在纽约市引发了动物疫情和人类疫情。随后,这种感染席卷了北美,导致鸟类大量死亡,并累计造成6万例人类感染病例,其中一半患者住院治疗,多数出现神经症状。该病毒与1998年在以色列分离出的一种鹅病毒极为相似。库蚊属蚊子被确定为该病毒的昆虫传播媒介。WNV可感染300多种鸟类,但在美国,美洲知更鸟(旅鸫)是生态上最重要的鸟类病毒宿主。病毒在蚊子之间传播可能会加速病毒扩散,同时也观察到了医源性WNV传播,这促使人们对血液制品进行筛查。与非洲WNV分离株相比,纽约WNV分离株NY99在非结构蛋白NS3中出现了一个突变,该突变增加了其在鸟类中的毒力,1996年罗马尼亚和1999年俄罗斯的WNV疫情中也观察到了这种突变。在其在美国传播的过程中,NY99在包膜基因E中获得了一个突变,该突变有利于病毒在昆虫传播媒介中的感染。欧洲在2024年报告了1200例年度WNV病例,主要集中在地中海国家,但也注意到感染向北蔓延至德国和荷兰。全球变暖可能会影响媒介传播感染的地理分布,使得生活在温带气候地区的人们可能越来越容易接触到这些感染。因此,研究温度对库蚊传播WNV的影响已成为近期的研究热点。本综述回顾了WNV感染相关的气候因素。