Mol Ecol Resour
August 2025
Next-generation sequencing (NGS) has the potential to transform mosquito-borne disease surveillance but remains under-utilised. This study introduces a comprehensive multi-loci metabarcoding-based MX (molecular xenomonitoring) approach to mosquito and arbovirus surveillance, enabling parallel identification of mosquito vectors, circulating arboviruses, and vertebrate hosts from bulk mosquito collections. The feasibility of this approach was demonstrated through its application to a large set (n = 110) of bulk field collections.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArbovirus surveillance of wild-caught mosquitoes is an affordable and sensitive means of monitoring virus transmission dynamics at various spatial-temporal scales, and emergence and re-emergence during epidemic and interepidemic periods. A variety of molecular diagnostics for arbovirus screening of mosquitoes (known as xeno-monitoring) are available, but most provide limited information about virus diversity. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based screening coupled with RNA sequencing is an increasingly affordable and sensitive pipeline for integrating complete viral genome sequencing into surveillance programs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Australian backyard mosquito, , is a highly urbanised pest species that has invaded New Zealand and the USA. Importantly, has been implicated as a vector of Ross River virus, a common and arthritogenic arbovirus in Australia, and is a laboratory vector of numerous other pathogenic viruses, including West Nile, yellow fever, and Zika viruses. To further explore live viruses harboured by field populations of and, more specifically, assess the genetic diversity of its virome, we processed 495 pools, comprising a total of 6,674 female collected across fifteen suburbs in Brisbane, Australia, between January 2018 and May 2019.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVector Borne Zoonotic Dis
September 2020
Transmission of vector-borne pathogens can vary in complexity from single-vector, single-host systems through to multivector, multihost vertebrate systems. Understanding the dynamics of transmission is important for disease prevention efforts, but is dependent on disentangling complex interactions within coupled natural systems. Ross River virus (RRV) is a multivector multihost pathogen responsible for the greatest number of notified vector-borne pathogen infections in humans in Australia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAustralia experienced its largest recorded outbreak of Ross River virus (RRV) during the 2014-15 reporting year, comprising >10,000 reported cases. We investigated epidemiologic, entomologic, and virologic factors that potentially contributed to the scale of the outbreak in Queensland, the state with the highest number of notifications (6,371). Spatial analysis of human cases showed that notifications were geographically widespread.
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