Meta-transcriptomics reveals potential virus transfer between Aedes communis mosquitoes and their parasitic water mites
CHARON, Justine
Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement [INRAE]
Biologie du fruit et pathologie [BFP]
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Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement [INRAE]
Biologie du fruit et pathologie [BFP]
CHARON, Justine
Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement [INRAE]
Biologie du fruit et pathologie [BFP]
< Leer menos
Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement [INRAE]
Biologie du fruit et pathologie [BFP]
Idioma
en
Article de revue
Este ítem está publicado en
Virus Evolution. 2022-07-01, vol. 8, n° 2
Oxford University Press
Resumen en inglés
Abstract Arthropods harbor a largely undocumented diversity of RNA viruses. Some arthropods, like mosquitoes, can transmit viruses to vertebrates but are themselves parasitized by other arthropod species, such as mites. ...Leer más >
Abstract Arthropods harbor a largely undocumented diversity of RNA viruses. Some arthropods, like mosquitoes, can transmit viruses to vertebrates but are themselves parasitized by other arthropod species, such as mites. Very little is known about the viruses of these ectoparasites and how they move through the host–parasite relationship. To address this, we determined the virome of both mosquitoes and the mites that feed on them. The mosquito Aedes communis is an abundant and widely distributed species in Sweden, in northern Europe. These dipterans are commonly parasitized by water mite larvae (Trombidiformes: Mideopsidae) that are hypothesized to impose negative selection pressures on the mosquito by reducing fitness. In turn, viruses are dual-host agents in the mosquito–mite interaction. We determined the RNA virus diversity of mite-free and mite-detached mosquitoes, as well as their parasitic mites, using meta-transcriptomic sequencing. Our results revealed an extensive RNA virus diversity in both mites and mosquitoes, including thirty-seven putative novel RNA viruses that cover a wide taxonomic range. Notably, a high proportion of viruses (20/37) were shared between mites and mosquitoes, while a limited number of viruses were present in a single host. Comparisons of virus composition and abundance suggest potential virus transfer between mosquitoes and mites during their symbiotic interaction. These findings shed light on virome diversity and ecology in the context of arthropod host–parasite–virus relationships.< Leer menos
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