Usutu, an African virus under surveillance in Europe
“This is a virus transmitted by mosquitoes that circulates between birds. It can attack the nervous system of certain birds, such as blackbirds, and cause significant mortality. It was first observed in southern Africa, in Swaziland, in 1959,” says Serafin Gutierrez, a virology researcher with CIRAD”S ASTRE research unit. The virus, called Usutu, belongs to the genus Flavivirus, which includes dengue, yellow fever, Zika, Japanese encephalitis and West Nile fever. These last two diseases have been studied by CIRAD for several years: they are zoonotic arboviruses, in other words animal virus diseases that can be transmitted to humans via insect bites, in this case of Usutu by mosquitoes of the genus Culex.
“We came across Usutu virus when we were looking for viruses associated with mosquitoes in the Mediterranean, and decided to take a closer look.”In Camargue, researchers from CIRAD detected it in mosquitoes of the species Culex pipiens, which also carry other arboviruses.”We showed that the virus was circulating actively within this mosquito species in Camargue in 2015, since we repeatedly observed it at several sites between June and September,”Serafin Gutierrez adds.Two strains of the virus have been detected, one of which is assumed to have been responsible for the human case in Montpellier and the other in bird deaths in Europe in 2016.
Usutu virus is largely unknown compared to other viruses with a similar transmission cycle, such as West Nile fever, which has already caused several clinical cases in humans and horses in the South of France. Is it endemic to the Mediterranean or merely brought by infected migrating birds coming from the tropics? What is its capacity for transmission by Culex mosquitoes in France?
CIRAD researchers are tackling these questions through studies of the interactions between the virus, its vectors, and the environment. This research is being conducted in collaboration with the PCCI unit (INSERM, University of Montpellier, Montpellier teaching hospital, EFS) as regards the human aspect, and other partners (ANSES, EID-Méditerranée, Tour du Valat). It is backed by the new Vectopole Sud network, which notably associates the IRD and EID-Méditerranée, and which brings together in Montpellier infrastructures and expertise in vector-borne diseases that are unique in Europe.
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