Viruses (Apr 2022)

Detection and Isolation of Sindbis Virus from Field Collected Mosquitoes in Timimoun, Algeria

  • Nazli Ayhan,
  • Aissam Hachid,
  • Laurence Thirion,
  • Kamel Eddine Benallal,
  • Laura Pezzi,
  • Fayez Ahmed Khardine,
  • Chahrazed Benbetka,
  • Sihem Benbetka,
  • Zoubir Harrat,
  • Remi Charrel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/v14050894
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 5
p. 894

Abstract

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Sindbis virus (SINV) is a zoonotic alphavirus (family Togaviridae, genus Alphavirus) that causes human diseases in Africa, Europe, Asia, and Australia. Occasionally, SINV outbreaks were reported in South Africa and northern Europe. Birds are the main amplifying hosts of SINV, while mosquitoes play the role of the primary vector. Culex mosquitoes were collected in Algeria and subsequently tested for SINV. SINV RNA was detected in 10 pools out of 40, from a total of 922 mosquitoes tested. A strain of SINV was isolated from a pool displaying high viral load. Whole-genome sequencing and phylogenetic analysis showed that the SINV Algeria isolate was most closely related to a Kenyan strain. This was the first record of SINV in Algeria and more broadly in northwestern Africa, which can be a potential risk for human health in the circulating area. Further studies are needed to measure the impact on public health through seroprevalence studies in Algeria.

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