2 resultados para West Nile virus.
em Portal do Conhecimento - Ministerio do Ensino Superior Ciencia e Inovacao, Cape Verde
Resumo:
The Culex pipiens complex includes two widespread mosquito vector species, Cx. pipiens and Cx. quinquefasciatus. The distribution of these species varies in latitude, with the former being present in temperate regions and the latter in tropical and subtropical regions. However, their distribution range overlaps in certain areas and interspecific hybridization has been documented. Genetic introgression between these species may have epidemiological repercussions for West Nile virus (WNV) transmission. Bayesian clustering analysis based on multilocus genotypes of 12 microsatellites was used to determine levels of hybridization between these two species in Macaronesian islands, the only contact zone described in West Africa. The distribution of the two species reflects both the islands’ biogeography and historical aspects of human colonization. Madeira Island displayed a homogenous population of Cx. pipiens, whereas Cape Verde showed a more intriguing scenario with extensive hybridization. In the islands of Brava and Santiago, only Cx. quinquefasciatus was found, while in Fogo and Maio high hybrid rates (~40%) between the two species were detected. Within the admixed populations, second-generation hybrids (~50%) were identified suggesting a lack of isolation mechanisms. The observed levels of hybridization may locally potentiate the transmission to humans of zoonotic arboviruses such as WNV.
Resumo:
As doenças transmitidas por vectores culicídeos (mosquitos) ocorrem em mais de 100 países do mundo e afectam cerca da metade da população mundial. A epidemiologia dessas doenças assenta numa tríade que envolve o agente etiológico (habitualmente parasitas ou vírus), o hospedeiro e o vector, não descurando a interacção existente entre estes e o ambiente, quer seja ele físico ou social. Em Cabo Verde, na sua história recente, estas doenças são representadas pela malária ou paludismo de carácter epidémico e marcadamente sazonal e pelo dengue, doença emergente que assolou pela primeira vez o país em 2009 (OMS, 2009), causando a maior epidemia de sempre na África Ocidental (Franco et al., 2010). A presença de mosquitos vectores destas duas doenças (respectivamente Anopheles arabiensis - membro do complexo Anopheles gambiae e Aedes aegypti) e de outros potenciais vectores, permite equacionar a possibilidade de emergência/reemergência doutras patologias, nomeadamente, das febres amarela e chikungunya, West Nile e a do Vale do Rift.