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Evaluation of mechanical transmission of HIV by the African soft tick, Ornithodoros moubata

 

作者: Ian Humphery-Smith,   Ghislaine Donker,   Alexandre Turzo,   Claude Chastel,   Helena Schmidt-Mayerova,  

 

期刊: AIDS  (OVID Available online 1993)
卷期: Volume 7, issue 3  

页码: 341-348

 

ISSN:0269-9370

 

年代: 1993

 

出版商: OVID

 

关键词: HIV;mechanical transmission;regurgitation;Ornithodoros moubata;ticks;Africa

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

ObjectivesTo assess the ability of the African Hut Tampan, Ornithodoros moubata, to mechanically transmit HIV-1 and to re-appraise HIV-1 infectivity in an arthropod cell line at 28 and 35 °C.DesignTo evaluate HIV-1 transmission by O. moubata, as determined by HIV-1 survival ‘blood-meal’ size and interval between feeds, various tick developmental stages were allowed to feed on a heavily infected lymphoblast-rich blood-meal containing HIV-1BRUin an in vitro feeding chamber.MethodsBlood-meal regurgitation was evaluated using51Cr-labelled human erythrocytes, and human lymphoblast survival in ticks using Trypan blue. HIV-1 survival in ticks was evaluated by reverse transcriptase activity in tick homogenates cocultured with CEM lymphoblasts. Polymerase chain reaction and Southern blot analysis were used to detect proviral HIV-1 in arthropod cells in vitro.ResultsHIV-1Bruremained viable for up to 10 days within O. moubata adults. This is the longest recorded survival of HIV in an arthropod. In agreement with other studies, O. moubata regurgitated part of its previous blood-meal into the feeding lesion. Human CEM lymphoblasts partially survived for up to 7 days at 28 and 35°C inside O. moubata's digestive tract. The blood-meal of adult female ticks was as high as 240 μ (approximately 70 times more than a mosquito), while the most likely potential mechanical vectors (fourth- and fifth-stage nymphs) ingested an average of 39 μ (maximum, 73 μl), with some ticks re-feeding as early as 14 days postfeed in the absence of a moult. Shortcomings associated with the experimental protocol suggest that HIV survival within O. moubata may reach 14 days following natural infection, or that ticks might re-feed earlier. Although HIV-1BRUand HIV-1NDKwere unable to replicate at 28 and 35°C in CD4– Aedes albopictus C6/36 mosquito cells, HIV-1NDKwas detected in its proviral form.ConclusionsOur investigations showed that mechanical transmission of HIV-1 by O. moubata is unlikely to occur in the laboratory. This may not be the situation under field conditions.

 

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