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Parallel Infection of Japanese Encephalitis Virus and <I>Wolbachia</I> within Cells of Mosquito Salivary Glands
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Citations
31
References
2006
Year
Vector-borne PathogenElectron MicroscopyInsect VirusMosquito Salivary GlandsMedicinePathogenesisImmunologyVirologyEndosymbiont WolbachiaMicrobiologyVirus-host InteractionSalivary GlandVirus TransmissionJapanese Encephalitis VirusArbovirusFlavivirusVector Borne DiseaseParallel Infection
The endosymbiont Wolbachia usually causes cytoplasmic incompatibility in dipteran hosts, including mosquitoes. However, some important arbovirus-transmitting mosquitoes such as Aedes aegypti (L.) are not heritably infected by Wolbachia. In Wolbachia-harboring mosquito Armigeres subalbatus Coquillett, colocalization of Wolbachia and inoculated Japanese encephalitis virus (family Flaviviridae, genus Flavivirus, JEV) in salivary gland (SG) cells was shown by electron microscopy. The infection rate of JEV in SGs, detected with either immunofluorescent antibody test or reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction, did not show significant differences between Wolbachia-infected and -free colonies. It is suggested that Wolbachia did not mediate resistance of SG cells to superinfection by JEV, although both microorgamisms coexist in the same niche, i.e., the same SG cell. Therefore, a SG escape barrier may not be elevated due to Wolbachia infection, which presumably has no deleterious effects on vector competence in Wolbachia-harboring mosquitoes.
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