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Infection and Dissemination of TaV-GFP Tagged Sindbis in Aedine Mosquitoes and Cell Lines

Arthropod-borne-viruses (arboviruses) pose a global threat due to their ability to be transmitted by hematophagous insects to vertebrate hosts resulting in a range of serious infectious diseases. Sindbis virus (SINV) is the prototype arbovirus of the genus Alphavirus in the family Togaviridae. The purpose of this study was to investigate the use of a fluorescent tagged reporter virus in both in vitro and in vivo environments. The fluorescent protein GFP was inserted between the Capsid and PE2 in the genome of TR339; SINV TaV-GFP (Wm. Klimstra Lab). This virus construct should have the same infectivity and virulence as wild type TR339, leaving a fluorescent ‘path’ in infected cells that may reveal virus transit. Virus stocks were grown in BHK-21 vertebrate cells and C7-10 mosquito cells. Two Aedes albopictus mosquito cell lines, C7-10 and C6/36, were then challenged with vertebrate and mosquito grown reporter virus. Evidence of GFP were seen as early as 6 hours post infection (p.i.) in all samples. Infected C7-10 cells with the vertebrate grown reporter virus were fixed for 1 hour in chilled 4% buffered paraformaldehyde; GFP was shown to be resilient to both fixation and light quenching. Ultimately, Ae. aegypti mosquitoes were challenged with a viremic bloodmeal at a titer of 107 PFU/ml and midguts were dissected over several days. The presence of GFP was observed in midgut columnar epithelial cells as early as day 3 p.i. and remained localized even at day 30 p.i. This is in agreement with published work on the interaction of TR339 in Ae. aegypti gut, signaling this viral construct as a means to visualize wild-type infection.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:unf.edu/oai:digitalcommons.unf.edu:etd-1584
Date01 January 2015
CreatorsSaredy, Jason J
PublisherUNF Digital Commons
Source SetsUniversity of North Florida
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typetext
Formatapplication/pdf
SourceUNF Theses and Dissertations

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