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− | </a>Pathogens responsible for vector-borne diseases can be parasite (Plasmodium falciparum, dirofilaria immitis), and viruses (i.e. arboviruses). 100 out of 500 estimated unique arboviruses are pathogen for humans. <B>Arboviruses</B> do not represent a single family of viruses but several viruses from different families: <B><i>Flaviviridae</i></B> (Dengue virus DENV, Zika virus ZIKV[1], Yellow Fever virus YFV, West Nile virus WNV, etc), <B><i>Togaviridae</i></B> (Chikungunya virus CHIKV, Ross River virus RRV, etc), Bunyaviridae (Rift Valley virus RVV, etc), which explain why specific treatments or vaccines need to be adapted for each family (See <a href="https://2016.igem.org/Team:Pasteur_Paris/Context_ID">IDENTITY CARDS</a> section) [2][3]. By infecting more than 400 million people per year, DENV is the most important | + | </a>Pathogens responsible for vector-borne diseases can be parasite (Plasmodium falciparum, dirofilaria immitis), and viruses (i.e. arboviruses). 100 out of 500 estimated unique arboviruses are pathogen for humans. <B>Arboviruses</B> do not represent a single family of viruses but several viruses from different families: <B><i>Flaviviridae</i></B> (Dengue virus DENV, Zika virus ZIKV[1], Yellow Fever virus YFV, West Nile virus WNV, etc), <B><i>Togaviridae</i></B> (Chikungunya virus CHIKV, Ross River virus RRV, etc), Bunyaviridae (Rift Valley virus RVV, etc), which explain why specific treatments or vaccines need to be adapted for each family (See <a href="https://2016.igem.org/Team:Pasteur_Paris/Context_ID">IDENTITY CARDS</a> section) [2][3]. By infecting more than 400 million people per year, DENV is the most important arbovirus. In recent decades, the global incidence of dengue has risen sharply and the transmission has increased in urban and suburban areas. More recently, Zika virus has been in the news : outbreaks occurred in French Polynesia (2013) and Brazil (2016), causing serious neurological complications such as Guillain-Barré syndrome and microcephaly. ZIKV epidemic has become since the begining of 2016 a Public <i>Health Emergency of International</i> Concern, according to WHO.</br></br> |
One of the particularities of the arboviruses is that they <B>infect</B> two kinds of host : a <B>mammalian host</B>host, which ensures the maintainance and the amplification of the virus, and an </B>arthropod vector</B> (mosquitoes) that ensures its <B>dissemination</B>. In fact, arboviruses originally circulate in a sylvatic cycle in which the virus is transmitted between non-human primates by zoophilic mosquitoes. During its repeated intrusions into forests (hunting, deforestation…), men are accidentally contaminated by contact with anthropo-zoophilic vectors. Then, anthropophilic vectors ensure the dissemination of arboviruses between humans in urban areas, during the urban cycle and epidemic cycle.
</br></br> | One of the particularities of the arboviruses is that they <B>infect</B> two kinds of host : a <B>mammalian host</B>host, which ensures the maintainance and the amplification of the virus, and an </B>arthropod vector</B> (mosquitoes) that ensures its <B>dissemination</B>. In fact, arboviruses originally circulate in a sylvatic cycle in which the virus is transmitted between non-human primates by zoophilic mosquitoes. During its repeated intrusions into forests (hunting, deforestation…), men are accidentally contaminated by contact with anthropo-zoophilic vectors. Then, anthropophilic vectors ensure the dissemination of arboviruses between humans in urban areas, during the urban cycle and epidemic cycle.
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The lifetime of a mosquito is about 50 days. Its lifestyle changes from the <B>aquatic mode</B> to the <B>terrestrial mode</B> and is divided into 4 stages: egg, larvae, pupae, adult. The mean duration of this developmental cycle is comprised between 8 and 12 days. </br></br> | The lifetime of a mosquito is about 50 days. Its lifestyle changes from the <B>aquatic mode</B> to the <B>terrestrial mode</B> and is divided into 4 stages: egg, larvae, pupae, adult. The mean duration of this developmental cycle is comprised between 8 and 12 days. </br></br> | ||
− | First, a female lays between <B>50-300 eggs</B> where standing water is present: a small amount of water is sufficient and breeding sites can be natural (flooded grasslands, waste water) or artificial (tires, bowls, cups, fountains, tires, barrels, vases). These eggs stick to container walls like glue, and hatch between 3 to 7 days after egg-laying according to environmental conditions. . In case of unsuitable conditions, some eggs can resist (omettre to) | + | First, a female lays between <B>50-300 eggs</B> where standing water is present: a small amount of water is sufficient and breeding sites can be natural (flooded grasslands, waste water) or artificial (tires, bowls, cups, fountains, tires, barrels, vases). These eggs stick to container walls like glue, and hatch between 3 to 7 days after egg-laying according to environmental conditions. . In case of unsuitable conditions, some eggs can resist (omettre to) desiccation for several years or enter diapause. </br></br> |
Second, when water completely covers the eggs, <B>larvae</B> emerge. Often called “wigglers”, larvae are active in water, where respiration occurs thanks to a siphon on the 8th segment of the abdomen of the larvae. Hung upside-down, larvae eat organic matter such as algae, microscopic organisms in order to ensure its development to the third stage: the <B>pupae</B>. </br></br> | Second, when water completely covers the eggs, <B>larvae</B> emerge. Often called “wigglers”, larvae are active in water, where respiration occurs thanks to a siphon on the 8th segment of the abdomen of the larvae. Hung upside-down, larvae eat organic matter such as algae, microscopic organisms in order to ensure its development to the third stage: the <B>pupae</B>. </br></br> |