Sublethal effects of iridovirus disease in a mosquito

Recognition of the importance of debilitating effects of insect virus diseases is currently growing. Commonly observed effects of sublethal infection at the individual level include extended development times, reduced pupal and adult weights, and lowered fecundity. However, for the most part, sublethal infections are assumed to be present in survivors of an inoculum challenge, rather than demonstrated to be present by microscopy or molecular techniques. Invertebrate iri- descent viruses are dsDNA viruses capable of causing disease with symptoms obvious to the naked eye, a "patent" infection, that is lethal. Furthermore, inap- parent "covert" infections may occur that are non-lethal and which can only be detected using bioassay or mo- lecular techniques. In this study, replication of Inverte- brate iridescent virus 6 in Aedes aegypti larvae was demonstrated in the absence of patent disease. A sensi- tive insect bioassay (using Galleria mellonella) allowed the detection of covert infections, which were more common than patent infections. A concentration- response relationship was detected for the incidence of patent infections. Covert infections were up to 2 orders of magnitude commoner than patent infections, but the prevalence of covert infections did not appear to be related to virus inoculum concentration. Exposure of larvae to virus inoculum resulted in extended juvenile development times. A reduction in the mean and an increase in the variability of fecundity and adult progeny production was observed in females exposed to an in- oculum challenge, although formal analysis was not possible. Males appeared capable of passing virus to uninfected females during the mating process. Covertly infected females were smaller and had shorter lifespans than control or virus-challenged females. A conservative estimate for the reduction in the net reproductive rate (R0) of such insects was calculated at slightly more than 20% relative to controls.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Marina Fernández, Carlos Félix Doctor autor 14468, Arredondo Jiménez, Juan Ignacio Doctor autor 14654, Castillo Vera, Alfredo Doctor autor 2082, Williams, Trevor Doctor autor 5446
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:Aedes aegypti, Iridovirus, Galleria mellonella, Agentes biológicos para el control de plagas,
Online Access:https://www.jstor.org/stable/4222320?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
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id KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:23251
record_format koha
institution ECOSUR
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-ecosur
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Sistema de Información Bibliotecario de ECOSUR (SIBE)
language eng
topic Aedes aegypti
Iridovirus
Galleria mellonella
Agentes biológicos para el control de plagas
Aedes aegypti
Iridovirus
Galleria mellonella
Agentes biológicos para el control de plagas
spellingShingle Aedes aegypti
Iridovirus
Galleria mellonella
Agentes biológicos para el control de plagas
Aedes aegypti
Iridovirus
Galleria mellonella
Agentes biológicos para el control de plagas
Marina Fernández, Carlos Félix Doctor autor 14468
Arredondo Jiménez, Juan Ignacio Doctor autor 14654
Castillo Vera, Alfredo Doctor autor 2082
Williams, Trevor Doctor autor 5446
Sublethal effects of iridovirus disease in a mosquito
description Recognition of the importance of debilitating effects of insect virus diseases is currently growing. Commonly observed effects of sublethal infection at the individual level include extended development times, reduced pupal and adult weights, and lowered fecundity. However, for the most part, sublethal infections are assumed to be present in survivors of an inoculum challenge, rather than demonstrated to be present by microscopy or molecular techniques. Invertebrate iri- descent viruses are dsDNA viruses capable of causing disease with symptoms obvious to the naked eye, a "patent" infection, that is lethal. Furthermore, inap- parent "covert" infections may occur that are non-lethal and which can only be detected using bioassay or mo- lecular techniques. In this study, replication of Inverte- brate iridescent virus 6 in Aedes aegypti larvae was demonstrated in the absence of patent disease. A sensi- tive insect bioassay (using Galleria mellonella) allowed the detection of covert infections, which were more common than patent infections. A concentration- response relationship was detected for the incidence of patent infections. Covert infections were up to 2 orders of magnitude commoner than patent infections, but the prevalence of covert infections did not appear to be related to virus inoculum concentration. Exposure of larvae to virus inoculum resulted in extended juvenile development times. A reduction in the mean and an increase in the variability of fecundity and adult progeny production was observed in females exposed to an in- oculum challenge, although formal analysis was not possible. Males appeared capable of passing virus to uninfected females during the mating process. Covertly infected females were smaller and had shorter lifespans than control or virus-challenged females. A conservative estimate for the reduction in the net reproductive rate (R0) of such insects was calculated at slightly more than 20% relative to controls.
format Texto
topic_facet Aedes aegypti
Iridovirus
Galleria mellonella
Agentes biológicos para el control de plagas
author Marina Fernández, Carlos Félix Doctor autor 14468
Arredondo Jiménez, Juan Ignacio Doctor autor 14654
Castillo Vera, Alfredo Doctor autor 2082
Williams, Trevor Doctor autor 5446
author_facet Marina Fernández, Carlos Félix Doctor autor 14468
Arredondo Jiménez, Juan Ignacio Doctor autor 14654
Castillo Vera, Alfredo Doctor autor 2082
Williams, Trevor Doctor autor 5446
author_sort Marina Fernández, Carlos Félix Doctor autor 14468
title Sublethal effects of iridovirus disease in a mosquito
title_short Sublethal effects of iridovirus disease in a mosquito
title_full Sublethal effects of iridovirus disease in a mosquito
title_fullStr Sublethal effects of iridovirus disease in a mosquito
title_full_unstemmed Sublethal effects of iridovirus disease in a mosquito
title_sort sublethal effects of iridovirus disease in a mosquito
url https://www.jstor.org/stable/4222320?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
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AT castilloveraalfredodoctorautor2082 sublethaleffectsofiridovirusdiseaseinamosquito
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spelling KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:232512024-03-12T13:01:30ZSublethal effects of iridovirus disease in a mosquito Marina Fernández, Carlos Félix Doctor autor 14468 Arredondo Jiménez, Juan Ignacio Doctor autor 14654 Castillo Vera, Alfredo Doctor autor 2082 Williams, Trevor Doctor autor 5446 textengRecognition of the importance of debilitating effects of insect virus diseases is currently growing. Commonly observed effects of sublethal infection at the individual level include extended development times, reduced pupal and adult weights, and lowered fecundity. However, for the most part, sublethal infections are assumed to be present in survivors of an inoculum challenge, rather than demonstrated to be present by microscopy or molecular techniques. Invertebrate iri- descent viruses are dsDNA viruses capable of causing disease with symptoms obvious to the naked eye, a "patent" infection, that is lethal. Furthermore, inap- parent "covert" infections may occur that are non-lethal and which can only be detected using bioassay or mo- lecular techniques. In this study, replication of Inverte- brate iridescent virus 6 in Aedes aegypti larvae was demonstrated in the absence of patent disease. A sensi- tive insect bioassay (using Galleria mellonella) allowed the detection of covert infections, which were more common than patent infections. A concentration- response relationship was detected for the incidence of patent infections. Covert infections were up to 2 orders of magnitude commoner than patent infections, but the prevalence of covert infections did not appear to be related to virus inoculum concentration. Exposure of larvae to virus inoculum resulted in extended juvenile development times. A reduction in the mean and an increase in the variability of fecundity and adult progeny production was observed in females exposed to an in- oculum challenge, although formal analysis was not possible. Males appeared capable of passing virus to uninfected females during the mating process. Covertly infected females were smaller and had shorter lifespans than control or virus-challenged females. A conservative estimate for the reduction in the net reproductive rate (R0) of such insects was calculated at slightly more than 20% relative to controls.Recognition of the importance of debilitating effects of insect virus diseases is currently growing. Commonly observed effects of sublethal infection at the individual level include extended development times, reduced pupal and adult weights, and lowered fecundity. However, for the most part, sublethal infections are assumed to be present in survivors of an inoculum challenge, rather than demonstrated to be present by microscopy or molecular techniques. Invertebrate iri- descent viruses are dsDNA viruses capable of causing disease with symptoms obvious to the naked eye, a "patent" infection, that is lethal. Furthermore, inap- parent "covert" infections may occur that are non-lethal and which can only be detected using bioassay or mo- lecular techniques. In this study, replication of Inverte- brate iridescent virus 6 in Aedes aegypti larvae was demonstrated in the absence of patent disease. A sensi- tive insect bioassay (using Galleria mellonella) allowed the detection of covert infections, which were more common than patent infections. A concentration- response relationship was detected for the incidence of patent infections. Covert infections were up to 2 orders of magnitude commoner than patent infections, but the prevalence of covert infections did not appear to be related to virus inoculum concentration. Exposure of larvae to virus inoculum resulted in extended juvenile development times. A reduction in the mean and an increase in the variability of fecundity and adult progeny production was observed in females exposed to an in- oculum challenge, although formal analysis was not possible. Males appeared capable of passing virus to uninfected females during the mating process. Covertly infected females were smaller and had shorter lifespans than control or virus-challenged females. A conservative estimate for the reduction in the net reproductive rate (R0) of such insects was calculated at slightly more than 20% relative to controls.Aedes aegyptiIridovirusGalleria mellonellaAgentes biológicos para el control de plagasOecologiahttps://www.jstor.org/stable/4222320?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contentsDisponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso