N° Year Authors Title Journal IF C T1 T2 T3 T4 T5 1 2019 Alizon S,Bravo

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

N° Year Authors Title Journal IF C T1 T2 T3 T4 T5 1 2019 Alizon S,Bravo N° Year Authors Title Journal IF C T1 T2 T3 T4 T5 PHILOSOPHICAL Towards A Multi-Level And A Multi-Disciplinary Approach To Dna Oncovirus Virulence TRANSACTIONS OF 1 2019 Alizon S,Bravo IG,Farrell PJ,Roberts S DOI THE ROYAL SOCIETY 7,192 0 ● B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES 2 2019 Ayala D,Zhang S,Chateau M,Fouet C,Morlais I,Costantini Association Mapping Desiccation Resistance Within Chromosomal Inversions In The MOLECULAR 6,885 2 ● ● C,Hahn MW,Besansky NJ African Malaria Vector Anopheles Gambiae DOI ECOLOGY 3 2019 Binetruy F,Bailly X,Chevillon C,Martin OY,Bernasconi Phylogenetics Of The Spiroplasma Ixodetis Endosymbiont Reveals Past Transfers TICKS AND TICK- 2,949 0 ● M,Duron O Between Ticks And Other Arthropods DOI BORNE DISEASES 4 2019 Binetruy F,Chevillon C,de Thoisy B,Garnier S,Duron O Survey Of Ticks In French Guiana DOI TICKS AND TICK- 2,949 0 ● BORNE DISEASES 5 2019 Brinker P,Fontaine MC,Beukeboom LW,Salles JF Host, Symbionts, And The Microbiome: The Missing Tripartite Interaction DOI TRENDS IN 11,149 0 ● MICROBIOLOGY Carrique-Mas J,Nguyen Thi Bich Van ,Nguyen Van Cuong ,Bao PREVENTIVE 6 2019 Dinh Truong ,Bach Tuan Kiet ,Pham Thi Huyen Thanh ,Nguyen Mortality, Disease And Associated Antimicrobial Use In Commercial Small-Scale VETERINARY 2,399 1 ● Ngoc Lon ,Vu Thi Quynh Giao ,Vo Be Hien ,Padungtod Chicken Flocks In The Mekong Delta Of Vietnam DOI MEDICINE P,Choisy M,Setyawan E,Rushton J,Thwaites G Sero-Prevalence Surveillance To Predict Vaccine-Preventable Disease Outbreaks; A OPEN FORUM 7 2019 Choisy M, ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ... Lesson From The 2014 Measles Epidemic In Northern Vietnam DOI INFECTIOUS NA 0 ● DISEASES 8 2019 Combe M,Gozlan RE,Jagadesh S,Velvin CJ,Ruffine R,Demar Comparison Of Mycobacterium Ulcerans (Buruli Ulcer) And Leptospira Sp. PLOS NEGLECTED 4,720 0 ● MP,Couppie P,Djossou F,Nacher M,Epelboin L (Leptospirosis) Dynamics In Urban And Rural Settings DOI TROPICAL DISEASES 9 2019 Cornet S,Nicot A,Rivero A,Gandon S Avian Malaria Alters The Dynamics Of Blood Feeding In Culex Pipiens Mosquitoes DOI MALARIA JOURNAL 3,017 0 ● 10 2019 Deletre E,Martin T,Dumenil C,Chandre F Insecticide Resistance Modifies Mosquito Response To Deet And Natural Repellents PARASITES & 3,408 0 ● DOI VECTORS 11 2019 Desclaux A,Malan MS,Egrot M,Sow K,Akindes F Surveillance In The Field: Over-Identification Of Ebola Suspect Cases And Its GLOBAL PUBLIC 2,005 1 ● Contributing Factors In West African At-Risk Contexts DOI HEALTH 12 2019 Elguero J,Elguero E About The Statistical Analysis Of Theoretically Calculated Values DOI STRUCTURAL 1,526 0 ● CHEMISTRY Fournier GFSR,Pinter A,Santiago R,Munoz-Leal S,Martins A High Gene Flow In Populations Of Amblyomma Ovale Ticks Found In Distinct EXPERIMENTAL AND 13 2019 TF,Lopes MG,Mccoy KD,Toty C,Horta MC,Labruna MB,Dias Fragments Of Brazilian Atlantic Rainforest DOI APPLIED 1,908 0 ● RA ACAROLOGY Francois S,Mutuel D,Duncan AB,Rodrigues LR,Danzelle A New Prevalent Densovirus Discovered In Acari. Insight From Metagenomics In Viral 14 2019 C,Lefevre S,Santos I,Frayssinet M,Fernandez E,Filloux Communities Associated With Two-Spotted Mite (Tetranychus Urticae) Populations DOI VIRUSES-BASEL 3,737 0 ● D,Roumagnac P,Froissart R,Ogliastro M 15 2019 Gaume L,Bazile V,Bousses P,Le Moguedec G,Marshall DJ The Biotic And Abiotic Drivers Of Living Diversity In The Deadly Traps Of Nepenthes BIODIVERSITY AND 2,948 0 ● Pitcher Plants DOI CONSERVATION 16 2019 Groc S,Abbate JL,Le Gal F,Gerber A,Tuaillon E,Albert High Prevalence And Diversity Of Hepatitis B And Hepatitis Delta Virus In Gabon DOI JOURNAL OF VIRAL 3,557 1 ● JL,Nkoghe D,Leroy EM,Roche B,Becquart P HEPATITIS 17 2019 Huber K,Jacquet S,Rivallan R,Adakal H,Vachiery N,Risterucci Low Effective Population Sizes In Amblyomma Variegatum, The Tropical Bont Tick DOI TICKS AND TICK- 2,949 0 ● AM,Chevillon C BORNE DISEASES INTERNATIONAL 18 2019 Kebe NM, ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ...,Pages M,Bastien P, ..., The Hslv Protease From Leishmania Major And Its Activation By C-Terminal Hslu JOURNAL OF 3,878 0 ● ..., ..., ... Peptides DOI MOLECULAR SCIENCES Larcher R,Lounnas M,Dumont Y,Michon AL,Bonzon L,Chiron Mycobacterium Chimaera Pulmonary Disease In Cystic Fibrosis Patients, France, 2010- EMERGING 19 2019 R,Carriere C,Klouche K,Godreuil S 2017 DOI INFECTIOUS 6,965 0 ● DISEASES Laval G,Peyregne S,Zidane N,Harmant C,Renaud F,Patin Recent Adaptive Acquisition By African Rainforest Hunter-Gatherers Of The Late AMERICAN JOURNAL 20 2019 E,Prugnolle F,Quintana-Murci L Pleistocene Sickle-Cell Mutation Suggests Past Differences In Malaria Exposure DOI OF HUMAN 10,085 1 ● GENETICS Le goff G,Damiens D,Ruttee AH,Payet L,Lebon C,Dehecq Field Evaluation Of Seasonal Trends In Relative Population Sizes And Dispersal Pattern PARASITES & 21 2019 JS,Gouagna LC Of Aedes Albopictus Males In Support Of The Design Of A Sterile Male Release VECTORS 3,408 0 ● Strategy DOI INTERNATIONAL 22 2019 Leveque MF,Chiffre D,Galtier C,Albaba S,Ravel C,Lachaud Molecular Diagnosis Of Toxoplasmosis At The Onset Of Symptomatic Primary Infection: JOURNAL OF 2,927 0 ● ● L,Iemmi A,Flori P,Sterkers Y A Straightforward Alternative To Serological Examinations DOI INFECTIOUS DISEASES 23 2019 Lugassy L, ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ...,Robert What Is The Evidence That Ecosystem Components Or Functions Have An Impact On ENVIRONMENTAL NA 0 ● V, ... Infectious Diseases? A Systematic Review Protocol DOI EVIDENCE Maes P, ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ARCHIVES OF 24 2019 ..., ...,Leroy EM, ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., Taxonomy Of The Order Mononegavirales: Second Update 2018 DOI VIROLOGY 2,144 3 ● ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ... Mahamat OO,Lounnas M,Hide M,Dumont Y,Tidjani High Prevalence And Characterization Of Extended-Spectrum Ss-Lactamase Producing BMC INFECTIOUS 25 2019 A,Kamougam K,Abderrahmane M,Benavides J,Solassol Enterobacteriaceae In Chadian Hospitals DOI DISEASES 2,949 0 ● J,Banuls AL,Jean-Pierre H,Carriere C,Godreuil S Mombo IM,Suquet E,Boundenga L,Mveang-Nzoghe INFECTION 26 2019 A,Maganga-Mboga C,Arnathau C,Sidobre C,Leroy Detection Of Novel Astroviruses Among Rodents Of Gabon, Central Africa DOI GENETICS AND 2,737 0 ● EM,Rougeron V EVOLUTION Mulatier M,Camara S,Koffi A,Carrasco D,Porciani A,Chandre SCIENTIFIC 27 2019 F,Moiroux N,Lefevre T,Dabire R,Assi S,Alou LPA,Dormont Efficacy Of Vector Control Tools Against Malaria-Infected Mosquitoes DOI REPORTS 4,609 0 ● ● L,Pennetier C,Cohuet A PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF 28 2019 Murall CL,Alizon S Modelling The Evolution Of Viral Oncogenesis DOI THE ROYAL SOCIETY 7,192 1 ● B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES PLOS 29 2019 Murall CL,Jackson R,Zehbe I,Boulle N,Segondy M,Alizon S Epithelial Stratification Shapes Infection Dynamics DOI COMPUTATIONAL 4,834 2 ● BIOLOGY 30 2019 Murgia MV, ..., ..., ..., ..., ...,Mccoy KD, ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ... Meeting The Challenge Of Tick-Borne Disease Control: A Proposal For 1000 Ixodes TICKS AND TICK- 2,949 1 ● Genomes DOI BORNE DISEASES Nabti LZ,Sahli F,Radji N,Mezaghcha W,Semara L,Aberkane High Prevalence Of Multidrug-Resistant Escherichia Coli In Urine Samples From MICROBIAL DRUG 31 2019 S,Lounnas M,Solassol J,Didelot MN,Jean-Pierre H,Dumont Inpatients And Outpatients At A Tertiary Care Hospital In Setif, Algeria DOI RESISTANCE 2,442 0 ● Y,Godreuil S ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ...,Aghokeng AF, ..., ..., ..., Prevalence Of Pretreatment Hiv Drug Resistance In West African And Southeast Asian JOURNAL OF 32 2019 ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., Countries DOI ANTIMICROBIAL 5,173 2 ● ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ..., ... CHEMOTHERAPY 33 2019 Ngoune JMT,Reveillaud J,Sempere G,Njiokou F,Melachio The Composition And Abundance Of Bacterial Communities Residing In The Gut Of PARASITES & 3,408 0 ● TT,Abate L,Tchioffo MT,Geiger A Glossina Palpalis Palpalis Captured In Two Sites Of Southern Cameroon DOI VECTORS Nguyen Vu Trung ,Le Thi Hoi ,Vu Minh Dien ,Dang Thi Huong EMERGING 34 2019 ,Tran Mai Hoa ,Vu Ngoc Lien ,Phan Van Luan ,Lewycka Clinical Manifestations And Molecular Diagnosis Of Scrub Typhus And Murine Typhus INFECTIOUS 6,965 0 ● SO,Choisy M,Bryant JE,Nadjm B,Van Doorn HR,Richards Vietnam, 2015-2017 DOI DISEASES AL,Van Kinh N Nkili-Meyong AA,Moussavou-Boundzanga P,Labouba Genome-Wide Profiling Of Human Papillomavirus Dna Integration In Liquid-Based SCIENTIFIC 35 2019 I,Koumakpayi IH,Jeannot E,Descorps-Declere S,Sastre-Garau Cytology Specimens From A Gabonese Female Population Using Hpv Capture REPORTS 4,609 1 ● X,Leroy EM,Belembaogo E,Berthet N Technology DOI Parker DM,Tun STT,White LJ,Kajeechiwa L,Thwin MM,Landier 36 2019 J,Chaumeau V,Corbel V,Dondorp AM,von Seidlein L,White Potential Herd Protection Against Plasmodium Falciparum Infections Conferred By Mass ELIFE 8,508 0 ● NJ,Mendez RJ,Nosten F Antimalarial Drug Administrations DOI FRONTIERS IN 37 2019 Piarroux RP,Romain T,Martin A,Vainqueur D,Vitte J,Lachaud Multicenter Evaluation Of A Novel Immunochromatographic Test For Anti-Aspergillus Igg CELLULAR AND 4,855 0 ● L,Gangneux JP,Gabriel F,Fillaux J,Ranque S Detection DOI INFECTION MICROBIOLOGY 38 2019 Roux O,Robert V Larval Predation
Recommended publications
  • Fontenille Powell 2020 Becomin
    From Anonymous to Public Enemy: How Does a Mosquito Become a Feared Arbovirus Vector? Didier Fontenille, Jeffrey Powell To cite this version: Didier Fontenille, Jeffrey Powell. From Anonymous to Public Enemy: How Does a Mosquito Become a Feared Arbovirus Vector?. Pathogens, MDPI, 2020, 9, 10.3390/pathogens9040265. hal-03054003 HAL Id: hal-03054003 https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03054003 Submitted on 11 Dec 2020 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. pathogens Opinion From Anonymous to Public Enemy: How Does a Mosquito Become a Feared Arbovirus Vector? Didier Fontenille 1,* and Jeffrey R. Powell 2 1 MIVEGEC unit, Université de Montpellier, Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD), CNRS, BP 64501, 34394 Montpellier, France 2 Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Yale University, 21 Sachem Street, New Haven, CT 06511-8934, USA; jeff[email protected] * Correspondence: [email protected] Received: 6 March 2020; Accepted: 2 April 2020; Published: 5 April 2020 Abstract: The past few decades have seen the emergence of several worldwide arbovirus epidemics (chikungunya, Zika), the expansion or recrudescence of historical arboviruses (dengue, yellow fever), and the modification of the distribution area of major vector mosquitoes such as Aedes aegypti and Ae.
    [Show full text]
  • Wolbachia Infection in Wild Mosquitoes (Diptera: Culicidae
    Ding et al. Parasites Vectors (2020) 13:612 https://doi.org/10.1186/s13071-020-04466-8 Parasites & Vectors RESEARCH Open Access Wolbachia infection in wild mosquitoes (Diptera: Culicidae): implications for transmission modes and host-endosymbiont associations in Singapore Huicong Ding†, Huiqing Yeo† and Nalini Puniamoorthy* Abstract Background: Wolbachia are intracellular bacterial endosymbionts found in most insect lineages. In mosquitoes, the infuence of these endosymbionts on host reproduction and arboviral transmission has spurred numerous stud- ies aimed at using Wolbachia infection as a vector control technique. However, there are several knowledge gaps in the literature and little is known about natural Wolbachia infection across species, their transmission modes, or associations between various Wolbachia lineages and their hosts. This study aims to address these gaps by exploring mosquito-Wolbachia associations and their evolutionary implications. Methods: We conducted tissue-specifc polymerase chain reaction screening for Wolbachia infection in the leg, gut and reproductive tissues of wild mosquitoes from Singapore using the Wolbachia surface protein gene (wsp) molecu- lar marker. Mosquito-Wolbachia associations were explored using three methods—tanglegram, distance-based, and event-based methods—and by inferred instances of vertical transmission and host shifts. Results: Adult mosquitoes (271 specimens) representing 14 genera and 40 species were screened for Wolbachia. Overall, 21 species (51.2%) were found positive for Wolbachia, including fve in the genus Aedes and fve in the genus Culex. To our knowledge, Wolbachia infections have not been previously reported in seven of these 21 species: Aedes nr. fumidus, Aedes annandalei, Uranotaenia obscura, Uranotaenia trilineata, Verrallina butleri, Verrallina sp. and Zeugno- myia gracilis.
    [Show full text]
  • The United States Army Medical Department
    THE UNITED STATES ARMY MEDICAL DEPARTMENT OURNAL THE MULTIDISCIPLINARY ASPECTS OF PUBLIC HEALTH January-June 2018 FirstJ Record of Aedes (Stegomyia) malayensis Colless (Diptera: Culicidae) in the Lao People’s Democratic Republic, Based on Morphological Diagnosis and Molecular Analysis 1 Maysa T. Motoki, PhD; Elliott F. Miot, MS; Leopoldo M. Rueda, PhD; et al Mosquito Surveillance Conducted by US Military Personnel in the Aftermath of the Nuclear Explosion at Nagasaki, Japan, 1945 8 David B. Pecor, BS; Desmond H. Foley, PhD; Alexander Potter Georgia’s Collaborative Approach to Expanding Mosquito Surveillance in Response to Zika Virus: Year Two 14 Thuy-Vi Nguyen, PhD, MPH; Rosmarie Kelly, PhD, MPH; et al An Excel Spreadsheet Tool for Exploring the Seasonality of Aedes Vector Hazard for User-Specified Administrative Regions of Brazil 22 Desmond H. Foley, PhD; David B. Pecor, BS Surveillance for Scrub Typhus, Rickettsial Diseases, and Leptospirosis in US and Multinational Military Training Exercise Cobra Gold Sites in Thailand 29 Piyada Linsuwanon, PhD; Panadda Krairojananan, PhD; COL Wuttikon Rodkvamtook, PhD, RTA; et al Risk Assessment Mapping for Zoonoses, Bioagent Pathogens, and Vectors at Edgewood Area, Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland 40 Thomas M. Kollars, Jr, PhD; Jason W. Kollars Optimizing Mission-Specific Medical Threat Readiness and Preventive Medicine for Service Members 49 COL Caroline A. Toffoli, VC, USAR Public Health Response to Imported Mumps Cases–Fort Campbell, Kentucky, 2018 55 LTC John W. Downs, MC, USA Developing Medical Surveillance Examination Guidance for New Occupational Hazards: The IMX-101 Experience 60 W. Scott Monks, MPAS, PA-C Missed Opportunities in Human Papillomavirus Vaccination Uptake Among US Air Force Recruits, 2009-2015 67 COL Paul O.
    [Show full text]
  • High Diversity of Mosquito Vectors in Cambodian Primary Schools And
    High diversity of mosquito vectors in Cambodian primary schools and consequences for arbovirus transmission Sebastien Boyer, Sebastien Marcombe, Sony Yean, Didier Fontenille To cite this version: Sebastien Boyer, Sebastien Marcombe, Sony Yean, Didier Fontenille. High diversity of mosquito vectors in Cambodian primary schools and consequences for arbovirus transmission. PLoS ONE, Public Library of Science, 2020, 15 (6), pp.e0233669. 10.1371/journal.pone.0233669. hal-03053997 HAL Id: hal-03053997 https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03053997 Submitted on 11 Dec 2020 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. Distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution| 4.0 International License PLOS ONE RESEARCH ARTICLE High diversity of mosquito vectors in Cambodian primary schools and consequences for arbovirus transmission 1 2 1 1 Sebastien BoyerID *, Sebastien Marcombe , Sony Yean , Didier Fontenille 1 Medical and Veterinary Entomology Unit, Institut Pasteur du Cambodge, Boulevard Monivong, Phnom Penh, Cambodia, 2 Medical Entomology Unit, Ministry of Health, Institut Pasteur du Laos, Vientiane, Lao PDR * [email protected] a1111111111 a1111111111 a1111111111 a1111111111 Abstract a1111111111 Only few data exist in Cambodia on mosquito diversity and their potential role as vectors. Many arboviruses, such as dengue and Japanese encephalitis, are endemic and mostly affect children in the country.
    [Show full text]
  • Risk of Yellow Fever Virus Transmission in the Asia-Pacific Region
    ARTICLE https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-19625-9 OPEN Risk of yellow fever virus transmission in the Asia-Pacific region Lucy de Guilhem de Lataillade1, Marie Vazeille1, Thomas Obadia2,3, Yoann Madec 4, Laurence Mousson1, ✉ ✉ Basile Kamgang 5, Chun-Hong Chen 6, Anna-Bella Failloux 1 & Pei-Shi Yen 1 Historically endemic to Sub-Saharan Africa and South America, yellow fever is absent from the Asia-Pacific region. Yellow fever virus (YFV) is mainly transmitted by the anthropophilic 1234567890():,; Aedes mosquitoes whose distribution encompasses a large belt of tropical and sub tropical regions. Increasing exchanges between Africa and Asia have caused imported YFV incidents in non-endemic areas, which are threatening Asia with a new viral emergence. Here, using experimental infections of field-collected mosquitoes, we show that Asian-Pacific Aedes mosquitoes are competent vectors for YFV. We observe that Aedes aegypti populations from Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand, and New Caledonia are capable of transmitting YFV 14 days after oral infections, with a number of viral particles excreted from saliva reaching up to 23,000 viral particles. These findings represent the most comprehensive assessment of vector competence and show that Ae. aegypti mosquitoes from the Asia-Pacific region are highly competent to YFV, corroborating that vector populations are seemingly not a brake to the emergence of yellow fever in the region. 1 Arboviruses and Insect Vectors Unit, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France. 2 Bioinformatics and Biostatistics Hub, Institut Pasteur, USR 3756, CNRS, Paris, France. 3 Malaria Unit: Parasites and Hosts, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France. 4 Emerging Diseases Epidemiology Unit, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France.
    [Show full text]
  • Situation of Dengue Fever, Chikungunya, Zika and Integrated Sentinel Surveillance of the Diseases in Vietnam
    SITUATION OF DENGUE FEVER, CHIKUNGUNYA, ZIKA AND INTEGRATED SENTINEL SURVEILLANCE OF THE DISEASES IN VIETNAM Luong Minh Tan Vietnam 53rd Master of Public Health/ International Course in Health Development 19 September 2016 - 8 September 2017 KIT (ROYAL TROPICAL INSTITUTE) Health Education/ Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam SITUATION OF DENGUE FEVER, CHIKUNGUNYA, ZIKA AND INTEGRATED SENTINEL SURVEILLANCE OF THE DISEASES IN VIETNAM Luong Minh Tan Vietnam Declaration: Where other people’s work has been used (either from a printed source, internet or any other source) this has been carefully acknowledged and referenced in accordance with departmental requirements. The thesis “Situation of dengue fever, chikungunya, zika and integrated sentinel surveillance of the diseases in Vietnam” is my own work. Signature:................................................... 53rd Master of Public Health/ International Course in Health Development (MPH/ICHD) 19 September 2016 - 8 September 2017 KIT (Royal Tropical Institute)/ Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Amsterdam, The Netherlands September 2017 Organised by: KIT (Royal Tropical Institute) Health Unit Amsterdam, The Netherlands In co-operation with: Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam/ Free University of Amsterdam (VU) Amsterdam, The Netherlands i Acknowledgment The thesis becomes a reality with the kind supports of helps of several individuals and organizations. I would like to express my sincere thanks to all of them. At the first place, I want to thank The Royal Tropical Institute (KIT) and Hanoi University of Public Health for organizing the Master Of Public Health course where I have experienced the cultural exchange and develop professional understanding of public health and its application in my work. I would like to express my special thanks and gratitude to my thesis supervisor and backstopper, Assoc.
    [Show full text]
  • Increased Female Mortality As a Barrier To
    JUNE 1987 Hygntolzmton Bennren tr.l :{gpps scvtELLARrs Corupr.px INCREASEDFEMALE MORTALITY AS A BARRIER TO HYBRIDIZATION BETWEEN MEMBERS OF THE AEDES SCUTELLARIS COMPLEX OF MOSQUTTOES R. E. DUHRKOPF Department of Bialagy, Ba.ylor Uniuersity, Waro, TX 76798 ABSTRACT. Interspecific crosses between the mosquitoeg Aedes polyncsiensis and Aedes mdnyensis have shown a unidirectiona_l pattern of compatibility. Aedes plynesicnsis females inseminated by Ae. nwlayercb males fail to produce viable offspring while the reciprocal cross is viable. In both crosses, rates of insemination are comparable to control rates. The Ae. polynesbnsis females fail to lay eggs.One apparent reason for thig is that the Ae. plynesiensis females have a high rate of mortality aftcr inseminatioiAy Le. malayensis males. Such mortality is an effective barrier to hybridization in that-croes, and is a new cliss of isolating mechanism. INTRODUCTION unidirectional pattern of compatibility (Yen and Barr 1973, Wright and Barr 1980, Wright anc The Aedes scutellaris complex of mosquitoes Wang 1980,Trpis et al. 1981b). is comprised ofabout 30 speciesdistributed from During attempts at these crosses it was ob- Andaman the Islands in the west to the Mar- served that the Aedespolynesi.ensis females in- quesas and Tuamoto Archipelago in the east, seminated by Ae. m.ahyenslsmales apparently and reaching as far north as Okinawa. Several had a higher rate of mortality than colony fe- members have been implicated as important males. This was true in a variety of attempts vectors of filariasis in the South Paciftc. Aedes involving several different laboratory strains. polyncsiensis Marks has been shown to be highly Even in attempted crossesof very large numbers susceptible to both Brueia Whnnqi and,Bngia (>500 females) mortality was so great that few, malayi (Duhrkopf and Trpis 1980).It is distrib- if any, eggswere laid.
    [Show full text]
  • From Anonymous to Public Enemy : How Does a Mosquito
    pathogens Opinion From Anonymous to Public Enemy: How Does a Mosquito Become a Feared Arbovirus Vector? Didier Fontenille 1,* and Jeffrey R. Powell 2 1 MIVEGEC unit, Université de Montpellier, Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD), CNRS, BP 64501, 34394 Montpellier, France 2 Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Yale University, 21 Sachem Street, New Haven, CT 06511-8934, USA; jeff[email protected] * Correspondence: [email protected] Received: 6 March 2020; Accepted: 2 April 2020; Published: 5 April 2020 Abstract: The past few decades have seen the emergence of several worldwide arbovirus epidemics (chikungunya, Zika), the expansion or recrudescence of historical arboviruses (dengue, yellow fever), and the modification of the distribution area of major vector mosquitoes such as Aedes aegypti and Ae. albopictus, raising questions about the risk of appearance of new vectors and new epidemics. In this opinion piece, we review the factors that led to the emergence of yellow fever in the Americas, define the conditions for a mosquito to become a vector, analyse the recent example of the new status of Aedes albopictus from neglected mosquito to major vector, and propose some scenarios for the future. Keywords: mosquito; culicidae; Aedes aegypti; Aedes albopictus; emergence; arbovirus 1. Introduction In a time of major social, climatic and environmental changes, several old concepts are back in fashion: “health is one” (one health approach), “the microbe is nothing, the context is everything” (Antoine Béchamp, Louis Pasteur), “diseases will always continue to emerge” [1]. All these old, but still very relevant views require a holistic approach, taking into account the complexity of interactions between diseases, microbes, hosts, vectors, environment, and their evolution as described by Mirko Grmek [2], under the term pathocenosis.
    [Show full text]
  • Area-Wide Integrated Pest Management: Development and Field Application, Pp
    Aedes aegypti CONTROL PROGRAMMES IN BRAZIL H. R. C. ARAÚJO1,3, D. O. CARVALHO2 AND M. L. CAPURRO1,3 1Department of Parasitology, Institute of Biomedical Sciences, University of São Paulo, São Paulo, SP, Brazil; [email protected] 2Joint FAO/IAEA Division, Insect Pest Control Laboratory, Seibersdorf, Austria; [email protected] ³National Institute of Science and Technology in Molecular Entomology, Medical Biochemistry Institute, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil SUMMARY Mosquito-borne diseases are among the most significant challenges facing societies around the world. In Brazil, current official epidemiological reports show increasing numbers of cases of mosquito-borne diseases, such as chikungunya, dengue, yellow fever and Zika, which are spreading to new areas of the country. Therefore, it can be stated that current methods used for the management of mosquito vectors in Brazil, established since 2002, have been ineffective. Thus, there is a necessity for readjustment or updating of the Aedes aegypti control programmes that are being applied in Brazil. As recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO), the best way to combat these pathogen vectors is an integrated approach where several convenient and compatible control techniques are combined to efficiently reduce or potentially eliminate a targeted insect vector population. In this manuscript, we updated a review published in 2015 by the same authors about Aedes control programmes in Brazil showing their basic concept and the principal components of Aedes integrated control programmes. Strategies such as public education, community engagement and responsibility; mechanical elimination of mosquito breeding habitats; the use of larvicides and adulticides; massive collection of eggs and adults using traps; and the reduction in the vector population through the promotion of sterility of mosquitoes by ionizing radiation, use of symbiont bacteria such as Wolbachia, or genetic modification, are discussed.
    [Show full text]
  • Ministério Da Saúde Fundação Oswaldo Cruz Centro De Pesquisas René Rachou Programa De Pós-Graduação Em Ciências Da Saúde
    Ministério da Saúde Fundação Oswaldo Cruz Centro de Pesquisas René Rachou Programa de Pós-graduação em Ciências da Saúde ASPECTOS BIOLÓGICOS DA INFECÇÃO PELAS CEPAS wMel e wMelPop de Wolbachia SOBRE POPULAÇÕES NATURAIS DE Aedes aegypti DO RIO DE JANEIRO por HEVERTON LEANDRO CARNEIRO DUTRA Belo Horizonte Fevereiro/2014 DISSERTAÇÃO MBCM – CPqRR H. L. C. DUTRA 2014 Ministério da Saúde Fundação Oswaldo Cruz Centro de Pesquisas René Rachou Programa de Pós-graduação em Ciências da Saúde ASPECTOS BIOLÓGICOS DA INFECÇÃO PELAS CEPAS wMel e wMelPop de Wolbachia SOBRE POPULAÇÕES NATURAIS DE Aedes aegypti DO RIO DE JANEIRO por HEVERTON LEANDRO CARNEIRO DUTRA Dissertação apresentada com vistas à obtenção do Título de Mestre em Ciências na área de concentração de Biologia Celular e Molecular Orientação: Dr. Luciano Andrade Moreira Co-orientação: Dr. Rafael Maciel de Freitas Belo Horizonte Fevereiro/2014 II Catalogação-na-fonte Rede de Bibliotecas da FIOCRUZ Biblioteca do CPqRR Segemar Oliveira Magalhães CRB/6 1975 D978a Dutra, Heverton Leandro Carneiro. 2014 Aspectos biológicos da infecção pelas cepas wMel e wMelpop de Wolbachia sobre populações naturais de Aedes aegypti do Rio de Janeiro / Heverton Leandro Carneiro Dutra. – Belo Horizonte, 2014. XVIII, 98 f.: il.; 210 x 297mm. Bibliografia: f.: 104 - 116 Dissertação (Mestrado) – Dissertação para obtenção do título de Mestre em Ciências pelo Programa de Pós - Graduação em Ciências da Saúde do Centro de Pesquisas René Rachou. Área de concentração: Biologia Celular e Molecular. 1. Dengue/prevenção & controle 2. Aedes/crescimento & desenvolvimento 3. Controle de Vetores I. Título. II. Moreira, Luciano Andrade (Orientação). III. Freitas, Rafael Maciel de. (Co-orientação) CDD – 22.
    [Show full text]
  • The Absence of Yellow Fever in Asia: History, Hypotheses, Vector Dispersal, Possibility of YF in Asia, and Other Enigmas
    viruses Review The Absence of Yellow Fever in Asia: History, Hypotheses, Vector Dispersal, Possibility of YF in Asia, and Other Enigmas Goro Kuno y Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Formerly Division of Vector-Borne Infectious Diseases, Fort Collins, CO 80521, USA; [email protected] Current Address: 1648 Collindale Dr., Fort Collins, CO 80525, USA. y Academic Editor: Remi N. Charrel Received: 15 October 2020; Accepted: 17 November 2020; Published: 25 November 2020 Abstract: Since the recent epidemics of yellow fever in Angola and Brazil as well as the importation of cases to China in 2016, there has been an increased interest in the century-old enigma, absence of yellow fever in Asia. Although this topic has been repeatedly reviewed before, the history of human intervention has never been considered a critical factor. A two-stage literature search online for this review, however, yielded a rich history indispensable for the debate over this medical enigma. As we combat the pandemic of COVID-19 coronavirus worldwide today, we can learn invaluable lessons from the historical events in Asia. In this review, I explore the history first and then critically examine in depth major hypotheses proposed in light of accumulated data, global dispersal of the principal vector, patterns of YF transmission, persistence of urban transmission, and the possibility of YF in Asia. Through this process of re-examination of the current knowledge, the subjects for research that should be conducted are identified. This review also reveals the importance of holistic approach incorporating ecological and human factors for many unresolved subjects, such as the enigma of YF absence in Asia, vector competence, vector dispersal, spillback, viral persistence and transmission mechanisms.
    [Show full text]
  • Species Composition and Their Medical Importance (Diptera: Culicidae)
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by UKM Journal Article Repository Serangga 21(2): 149-162 ISSN 1394-5130 © 2016, Centre for Insects Systematic, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia MOSQUITOES OF KUDAT: SPECIES COMPOSITION AND THEIR MEDICAL IMPORTANCE (DIPTERA: CULICIDAE) Ng S.H.1, Homathevi R.2 and Chua T.H.1 1Department of Pathobiology of Medical Diagnosis, Faculty of Medicine and Health Science, University Malaysia Sabah, Jalan UMS, 88400, Kota Kinabalu, Sabah. 2Institute Tropical Biology and Conservation, Universiti Malaysia Sabah, Jalan UMS, 88400, Kota Kinabalu, Sabah. Corresponding author: [email protected] ABSTRACT A survey of mosquito fauna was done to determine the mosquito population and species composition in Kudat. Outdoor human landing catches (HLC) were done from April to June 2015. A total of 4,350 mosquitoes, representing eight genera and 37 species were collected. These include Aedes (Stegomyia), Aedimorphus, Anopheles, Armigeres, Culex, Mansonia, Phagomyia and Uranotaenia. Medical important species are specially noted and discussed. Armigeres (52.7%) was the most abundant, followed by Culex (31.9%), Aedes (9.4%), and Anopheles (4.3%). Armigeres kesseli and Ar. subabaltus were the two most common species. Armigeres annulipalpi and Phagomyia prominens are new records of Sabah. 150 Serangga Keywords: Mosquito species composition, new records, medical importance, Kudat ABSTRAK Kaji selidik berkaitan dengan fauna nyamuk telah dijalankan untuk mengenalpasti populasi nyamuk serta komposisi spesis yang terdapat di Kudat. Kaedah tangkapan berumpan manusia (“human landing catch”) teleh dipakai dari bulan Apil 2015 sehingga Jun 2015. Sejumlah 4,350 nyamuk terdiri daripada lapan genera dan 37 spesis teleh ditangkap.
    [Show full text]