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The dengue virus (DENV) is primarily transmitted by . Investigating genes associated with mosquito susceptibility to DENV2 offers a theoretical foundation for targeted interventions to regulate or block viral replication and transmission within mosquitoes. Based on the transcriptomic analyses of the midgut and salivary glands from infected with DENV2, alongside analyses of Aag2 cell infections, 24 genes potentially related to the regulation of infection with DENV2 were selected. By establishing transient transfection and overexpression models of Aag2 cells, and mosquito target gene interference models, the difference in viral load before and after treatment was compared, and the effects of DEGs on viral replication were evaluated. After overexpressing 24 DEGs in Aag2 cells, 19 DEGs showed a significant difference in DENV2 RNA copies in the cell supernatant ( < 0.05). In adult mosquitoes, knocking down defensin-A, defensin-A-like, and SMCT1 respectively reduced the DENV2 RNA copies, while knocking down UGT2B1 and ND4 respectively increased the DENV2 RNA copies. In this study, to assess the role of genes related to DENV2 replication, and transient transfection and overexpression models in Aag2 cells and mosquito gene knockdown models were established, and five genes, defensin-A, defensin-A-like, SMCT1, UGT2B1, and ND4, were found to have an impact on the replication of DENV2, providing a reference basis for studying the complex mechanism of mosquito-virus interactions.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v17010067 | DOI Listing |
Viruses
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.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAntiviral Res
September 2025
Department of Systems Biology, Biomedical Research Direction, Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (CIGB), Havana, Cuba. Electronic address:
Dengue virus is the most important arbovirus for public health worldwide. Aedes aegypti is the DENV primary vector and acquires the virus during blood meal from a viremic human. BCN0941 is a structure-based designed antiviral peptide that inhibits early stages of DENV infection in mammalian cells [WO2015131858A2].
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS Pathog
May 2025
Foundational Sciences, Central Michigan University College of Medicine, Mount Pleasant, Michigan, United States of America.
Trehalose is a non-reducing disaccharide that is the major sugar found in insect hemolymph fluid. Trehalose provides energy, and promotes growth, metamorphosis, stress recovery, chitin synthesis, and insect flight. Trehalase is the only enzyme responsible for the hydrolysis of trehalose, which makes it an attractive molecular target.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFViruses
January 2025
State Key Laboratory of Pathogen and Biosecurity, Beijing 100071, China.
The dengue virus (DENV) is primarily transmitted by . Investigating genes associated with mosquito susceptibility to DENV2 offers a theoretical foundation for targeted interventions to regulate or block viral replication and transmission within mosquitoes. Based on the transcriptomic analyses of the midgut and salivary glands from infected with DENV2, alongside analyses of Aag2 cell infections, 24 genes potentially related to the regulation of infection with DENV2 were selected.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOne Health
June 2025
Laboratory of Virology, Wageningen University and Research, Wageningen, the Netherlands.
Millions of people are annually infected by mosquito-transmitted arboviruses including dengue virus (DENV), West Nile virus (WNV), Zika virus (ZIKV) and chikungunya virus (CHIKV). Insect-specific flaviviruses (ISFs), which only infect mosquitoes and cannot replicate in vertebrates, can offers a potential one health strategy to block the transmission of arboviruses by reducing the mosquito's susceptibility for subsequent arbovirus infections through superinfection exclusion (SIE),. Most SIE studies focus on acute ISF infections in RNAi-deficient C6/36 cells.
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