Publications by authors named "Isabelle Moltini-Conclois"

Recent evidence of vertical transmission of Tonate virus (TONV) during early pregnancy and its association with fetal neurological anomalies highlights its potential public health threat. TONV is an understudied alphavirus endemic to French Guiana. The growing presence of in Europe raises concerns about its ability to transmit emerging arboviruses, including TONV.

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The two main Zika virus (ZIKV) vectors, and (invasive and native species, respectively), are present in Gabon (Central Africa). The aim of this study was to determine the entomological ZIKV risk associated with these mosquito species in Gabon by evaluating their vector competence for an African (i.e.

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Endogenous viral elements (EVEs) are viral sequences integrated in host genomes. A large number of non-retroviral EVEs was recently detected in Aedes mosquito genomes, leading to the hypothesis that mosquito EVEs may control exogenous infections by closely related viruses. Here, we experimentally investigated the role of an EVE naturally found in Aedes aegypti populations and derived from the widespread insect-specific virus, cell-fusing agent virus (CFAV).

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Although specific interactions between host and pathogen genotypes have been well documented in invertebrates, the identification of host genes involved in discriminating pathogen genotypes remains a challenge. In the mosquito Aedes aegypti, the main dengue virus (DENV) vector worldwide, statistical associations between host genetic markers and DENV types or strains were previously detected, but the host genes underlying this genetic specificity have not been identified. In particular, it is unknown whether DENV type- or strain-specific resistance relies on allelic variants of the same genes or on distinct gene sets.

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Flaviviruses encompass not only medically relevant arthropod-borne viruses (arboviruses) but also insect-specific flaviviruses (ISFs) that are presumably maintained primarily through vertical transmission in the insect host. Interestingly, ISFs are commonly found infecting important arbovirus vectors such as the mosquito . Cell-fusing agent virus (CFAV) was the first described ISF of mosquitoes more than four decades ago.

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Diseases caused by mosquito-borne viruses have been on the rise for the last decades, and novel methods aiming to use laboratory-engineered mosquitoes that are incapable of carrying viruses have been developed to reduce pathogen transmission. This has stimulated efforts to identify optimal target genes that are naturally involved in mosquito antiviral defenses or required for viral replication. Here, we investigated the role of a member of the Tudor protein family, Tudor-SN, upon dengue virus infection in the mosquito Aedes aegypti.

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Article Synopsis
  • Mosquitoes spread viruses like dengue and Zika, which can make people sick.
  • There are also some viruses that only affect insects, like the cell-fusing agent virus (CFAV).
  • Scientists found that CFAV can actually help stop the dengue and Zika viruses from spreading in live mosquitoes, which might help reduce how often these viruses make people sick.
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Understanding the interactions between pathogens sharing the same host can be complicated for holometabolous animals when larval and adult stages are exposed to distinct pathogens. In medically important insect vectors, the effect of pathogen exposure at the larval stage may influence susceptibility to human pathogens at the adult stage. We addressed this hypothesis in the mosquito , a major vector of arthropod-borne viruses (arboviruses), such as the dengue virus (DENV) and the chikungunya virus (CHIKV).

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how the time it takes for mosquitoes to spread dengue virus influences the epidemiology of the disease.
  • It highlights that the genetic variation among different strains of the dengue virus significantly affects the rate at which mosquitoes become infectious after acquiring the virus.
  • The research uses simulations to predict that these differences in virus transmission dynamics could lead to varying risks of dengue outbreaks and the number of human infections.
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Chimeric reads can be generated by recombination during the preparation of high-throughput sequencing libraries. Our attempt to detect biological recombination between the genomes of dengue virus (DENV; +ssRNA genome) and its mosquito host using the Illumina Nextera sequencing library preparation kit revealed that most, if not all, detected host-virus chimeras were artificial. Indeed, these chimeras were not more frequent than with control RNA from another species (a pillbug), which was never in contact with DENV RNA prior to the library preparation.

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Dengue virus (DENV) causes more human infections than any other mosquito-borne virus. The current lack of antiviral strategies has prompted genome-wide screens for host genes that are required for DENV infectivity. Earlier transcriptomic studies that identified DENV host factors in the primary vector Aedes aegypti used inbred laboratory colonies and/or pools of mosquitoes that erase individual variation.

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Conditions experienced during larval development of holometabolous insects can affect adult traits, but whether differences in the bacterial communities of larval development sites contribute to variation in the ability of insect vectors to transmit human pathogens is unknown. We addressed this question in the mosquito , a major arbovirus vector breeding in both sylvatic and domestic habitats in Sub-Saharan Africa. Targeted metagenomics revealed differing bacterial communities in the water of natural breeding sites in Gabon.

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Due to their error-prone replication, RNA viruses typically exist as a diverse population of closely related genomes, which is considered critical for their fitness and adaptive potential. Intra-host demographic fluctuations that stochastically reduce the effective size of viral populations are a challenge to maintaining genetic diversity during systemic host infection. Arthropod-borne viruses (arboviruses) traverse several anatomical barriers during infection of their arthropod vectors that are believed to impose population bottlenecks.

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Article Synopsis
  • Scientists studied how dengue virus spreads through mosquitoes and found that mosquitoes release virus parts in their waste after getting infected.
  • They discovered that by checking this waste, they can tell how much virus is in the mosquito's body over time, which helps understand how the virus spreads.
  • This method could be really helpful for tracking and preventing dengue outbreaks in real life by measuring how quickly the virus moves inside mosquitoes.
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