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      Vertical transmission of dengue viruses by strains of Aedes albopictus recently introduced into Brazil.

      Journal of the American Mosquito Control Association
      Aedes, microbiology, Animals, Antigens, Viral, analysis, Brazil, Dengue Virus, immunology, isolation & purification, Female, Insect Vectors, Larva, Male, Species Specificity

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          Abstract

          Three strains of Aedes albopictus from Brazil were examined for their ability to vertically transmit dengue 1 (DEN-1) and dengue 4 (DEN-4) viruses. Parental females were uniformly infected by parenteral inoculation of virus, and 8,121 F1 progeny from DEN-1 and DEN-4 infected mothers were pooled in lots of approximately 50 and tested for virus. Seven of 60 pools were positive for DEN-1 virus, and 1 of 121 pools was positive for DEN-4 virus. In DEN-1 assays, the minimum infection rate (MIR) for larvae (2 pools tested) was 1:84. Among positive cohorts of adults, pooled by sex and by geographic strain of mosquito, the MIR ranged from 1:193 to 1:626 for males and from 1:187 to 1:311 for females. Only a single pool of adult females was positive for DEN-4 virus (MIR 1:1022 for an adult female cohort from Santa Teresa). These results indicate that Brazilian Ae. albopictus have the potential to play a role in the maintenance of dengue viruses in nature.

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