Grimstad P R, Craig G B, Ross Q E, Yuill T M
Am J Trop Med Hyg. 1977 Sep;26(5 Pt 1):990-6. doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.1977.26.990.
In laboratory tests, 20 strains of Aedes triseriatus differed widely in response to La Crosse virus. Infection rates ranged from 40% to 93%, and rate of transmission ranged from 20% to 90%. A control strain, tested in seven different trials, showed no significant variation in susceptibility (71--77%) or transmission ability (54--68%). A distinct geographic pattern was evident. The susceptibility and transmission rates of strains from areas where La Crosse virus is endemic were lower than that of strains from non-endemic regions, showing 71% vs. 87% for susceptibility to infection, and 46% vs. 74% for ability to transmit. Similar results have been observed in other mosquito-parasite systems, leading to the hypothesis that A. triseriatus in the upper Midwest is evolving resistance to La Crosse virus. Laboratory colonization had diverse and unpredictable effects on both transmission and infection, as might be expected with small populations and genetic drift.
在实验室测试中,20株三带喙库蚊对拉克罗斯病毒的反应差异很大。感染率在40%至93%之间,传播率在20%至90%之间。在七次不同试验中测试的一个对照菌株,其易感性(71%-77%)或传播能力(54%-68%)没有显著变化。明显存在一种独特的地理模式。来自拉克罗斯病毒流行地区的菌株的易感性和传播率低于非流行地区的菌株,感染易感性分别为71%和87%,传播能力分别为46%和74%。在其他蚊虫-寄生虫系统中也观察到了类似结果,这导致了一个假说,即中西部上游地区的三带喙库蚊正在进化出对拉克罗斯病毒的抗性。正如在小种群和基因漂变情况下所预期的那样,实验室养殖对传播和感染都产生了多样且不可预测的影响。