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Dengue virus (DENV) is naturally transmitted by mosquitoes to humans, infecting cells of both hosts. Unlike in mammalian cells, DENV usually does not cause extremely deleterious effects on cells of mosquitoes. Despite this, clustered progeny virions were found to form infection foci in a high density cell culture. It is thus interesting to know how the virus spreads among cells in tissues such as the midgut within live mosquitoes. This report demonstrates that cell-to-cell spread is one way for DENV to infect neighboring cells without depending on the "release and entry" mode. In the meantime, a membrane-bound vacuole incorporating tetraspanin C189 was formed in response to DENV infection in the C6/36 cell and was subsequently transported along with the contained virus from one cell to another. Knockdown of C189 in DENV-infected C6/36 cells is shown herein to reduce cell-to-cell transmission of the virus, which may be recovered by co-transfection with a C189-expressing vector in DENV-infected C6/36 cells. Moreover, cell-to-cell transmission usually occurred at the site where the donor cell directly contacts the recipient cell. It suggested that C189 is crucially involved in the intercellular spread of progeny viral particles between mosquito cells. This novel finding presumably accounts for the rapid and efficient infection of DENV after its initial replication within tissues of the mosquito.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0003885 | DOI Listing |
Front Microbiol
August 2025
College of Life Sciences, Hebei University, Baoding, China.
Introduction: The Zika virus (ZIKV) envelope (E) protein is critical for viral replication and host interactions. Although glycosylation of the E protein is known to influence viral infectivity and immune evasion, the specific functional roles of E protein glycosylation in ZIKV infectivity in mosquito cells remain unclear.
Methods: In this study, we generated a deglycosylation mutant ZIKV with a T156I substitution in the E protein and investigated its effects on viral replication and viral-host interactions in mosquito C6/36 cells.
J Virol Methods
August 2025
School of Pharmacy, University of Nottingham Malaysia, Jalan Broga, Semenyih, Selangor 43500, Malaysia. Electronic address:
Arboviruses are transmitted to humans and animals by arthropods and can be fatal. Dengue fever remains a major mosquito-borne disease in tropical regions, primarily spread by Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus. Despite vector control and vaccine efforts, dengue virus (DENV) continues to pose serious public health challenges in Malaysia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Virol
August 2025
Yunnan Tropical and Subtropical Animal Virus Diseases Laboratory, Yunnan Animal Science and Veterinary Institute, Kunming, China.
Yunnan Province is an area in China with a major prevalence of biting arthropods (including mosquitos, ticks, and ) and arboviruses including dengue virus (DENV), bluetongue virus (BTV), and epizootic hemorrhagic disease virus (EHDV). Therefore, attempts to isolate and detect arboviruses are frequently conducted in Yunnan during the past decades. In this study, a total of three viral strains/isolates (LF6-4, LF3-1, and LF6C2) previously isolated from cattle, goat, and in Lufeng County, Yunnan Province, between 2022 and 2023 were used for whole-genome sequencing, phylogenetic analysis, and electron microscopic analysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVirulence
December 2025
Shandong Second Medical University, Weifang, China.
Arboviruses are a major public health concern. Wenzhou sobemo-like virus 4 (WZSLV4) is a recently identified single-stranded RNA mosquito-borne virus. In this study, 3608 mosquitoes were collected from Shandong Province, China, and divided into 58 pools according to species and sex.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFViruses
June 2025
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Georgetown University, Washington, DC 20057, USA.
Dengue virus serotypes 1-4 (DENV1-4) have spread through tropical and subtropical countries, causing endemic and epidemic diseases. Recently, a novel field approach using the symbiont was proposed to suppress DENV transmission via the mosquito vectors and . Previously, we showed that a strain, MelPop, suppresses DENV2 replication in the C6/36 cell line, with the mutant DENV2 appearing and replacing the wild type DENV2.
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