
Four serotypes of dengue virus (DENV 1-4) currently circulate between humans and domestic/peridomestic Aedes mosquitoes, resulting in 100 million infections per year. All four serotypes emerged, independently, from sylvatic progenitors transmitted among non-human primates by arboreal Aedes mosquitoes. This study investigated the genetic and phenotypic changes associated with emergence of human DENV-4 from its sylvatic ancestors. Analysis of complete genomes of 3 sylvatic and 4 human strains revealed high conservation of both the 5'- and 3'-untranslated regions but considerable divergence within the open reading frame. Additionally, the two ecotypes did not differ significantly in replication dynamics in cultured human liver (Huh-7), monkey kidney (Vero) or mosquito (C6/36) cells, although significant inter-strain variation within ecotypes was detected. These findings are in partial agreement with previous studies of DENV-2, where human strains produced a larger number of progeny than sylvatic strains in human liver cells but not in monkey or mosquito cells.
Genotype, Cell Line, Dengue, Evolution, Molecular, Viral Proteins, Aedes, Virology, Animals, Humans, Human DENV, Phylogeny, Ecotype, Primate Diseases, Dengue virus (DENV), Phylogenetic and phenotypic analyses, Q Science (General), Molecular Sequence Annotation, Haplorhini, Dengue Virus, Insect Vectors, Phenotype, Sylvatic DENV
Genotype, Cell Line, Dengue, Evolution, Molecular, Viral Proteins, Aedes, Virology, Animals, Humans, Human DENV, Phylogeny, Ecotype, Primate Diseases, Dengue virus (DENV), Phylogenetic and phenotypic analyses, Q Science (General), Molecular Sequence Annotation, Haplorhini, Dengue Virus, Insect Vectors, Phenotype, Sylvatic DENV
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