A New Clade of Insect-Specific Flaviviruses from Australian Anopheles Mosquitoes Displays Species-Specific Host Restriction
Colmant AMG., Hobson-Peters J., Bielefeldt-Ohmann H., van den Hurk AF., Hall-Mendelin S., Chow WK., Johansen CA., Fros J., Simmonds P., Watterson D., Cazier C., Etebari K., Asgari S., Schulz BL., Beebe N., Vet LJ., Piyasena TBH., Nguyen H-D., Barnard RT., Hall RA.
Flaviviruses like dengue, Zika, or West Nile virus infect millions of people each year and are transmitted to humans via infected-mosquito bites. A subset of flaviviruses can only replicate in the mosquito host, and recent studies have shown that some can interfere with pathogenic flaviviruses in mosquitoes and limit the replication and transmission of the latter. The insect-specific flaviviruses (ISFs) reported here form a new Anopheles mosquito-associated clade separate from the Aedes - and Culex -associated ISF clades. The identification of distinct clades for each mosquito genus provides new insights into the evolution and ecology of flaviviruses. One of these viruses was shown to replicate in the midgut of the mosquito host and exhibit the most specialized host restriction reported to date for ISFs. Understanding this unprecedented host restriction in ISFs could help identify the mechanisms involved in the evolution of flaviviruses and their emergence as mosquito-borne pathogens.