Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: UMLS:C0038362 (
stomatitis
)
8,852
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Simulium vittatum females were shown to be competent vectors for the New Jersey serotype (VSNJ) of vesicular
stomatitis
virus (
Camp
Verde strain). Seventy percent of females infected intrathoracically transmitted infectious virions in their saliva after a 10-d incubation period. When infected with virus per os, 63% of the flies tested were positive at day 10, and 45% of flies infected in this manner also secreted virus in their saliva by day 9 or 10 after infection. When ingested by S. vittatum females, VSNJ virus readily replicated and increased from a mean baseline titer of 1.2 x 10(4) pfu per fly to 3 x 10(4) pfu per fly on day 10. An eclipse phase was demonstrated between approximately 18 and 48 h postinfection. This experimental evidence supports the hypothesis that black flies play a major role in the epizootic transmission of VSNJ. This is also the first confirmed example of biological transmission of an arbovirus by a member of the Simuliidae.
...
PMID:Biological transmission of vesicular stomatitis virus (New Jersey) by Simulium vittatum (Diptera: Simuliidae). 132 91
Black flies collected from southern Arizona were evaluated for their vector competence to the Oaxaca and
Camp
Verde isolates of vesicular
stomatitis
virus (New Jersey serotype) (VSV-NJ). The
Camp
Verde isolate is the index isolate of the 1982-1983 VSV-NJ epizootic that infected humans and livestock in 14 western states. Previous experiments have shown that colonized Simulium vittatum females are competent laboratory vectors of both virus isolates. However, under controlled laboratory conditions, Simulium bivittatum and S. longithallum were found to be incompetent vectors of both virus isolates. After oral infections, the Oaxaca isolate replicated in 35% and 38% of S. bivittatum and S. longithallum, respectively, but did not disseminate to the salivary glands. Thus, virus was not detected in the saliva of either black fly species with either VSV-NJ isolate, indicating the presence of a midgut barrier. Simulium notatum was found to be a competent laboratory vector of both virus isolates. Infectious virions were detected in the saliva of 23% and 26% of S. notatum infected orally with the Oaxaca and
Camp
Verde VSV-NJ isolates, respectively. This study suggests that the black fly identified as S. bivittatum was probably not involved in virus dissemination during the 1982-1983 epizootic in the western United States. Because the geographic distribution of S. notatum is not known, its involvement in that epizootic remains obscure.
...
PMID:Vector competence of select black fly species for vesicular stomatitis virus (New Jersey serotype). 924 16