Viruses (Jun 2024)

Molecular Detection and Genetic Characterization of Two Dugbe Orthonairovirus Isolates Detected from Ticks in Southern Senegal

  • Mignane Ndiaye,
  • Aminata Badji,
  • Idrissa Dieng,
  • Anna S. Dolgova,
  • Moufid Mhamadi,
  • Anastasiia D. Kirichenko,
  • Anna S. Gladkikh,
  • Alioune Gaye,
  • Ousmane Faye,
  • Amadou Alpha Sall,
  • Mawlouth Diallo,
  • Vladimir G. Dedkov,
  • Oumar Faye

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/v16060964
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 6
p. 964

Abstract

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Dugbe virus (DUGV) is a tick-borne arbovirus first isolated in Nigeria in 1964. It has been detected in many African countries using such diverse methods as serological tests, virus isolation, and molecular detection. In Senegal, reports of DUGV isolates mainly occurred in the 1970s and 1980s. Here, we report a contemporary detection of three novel DUGV isolates upon screening of a total of 2877 individual ticks regrouped into 844 pools. The three positive pools were identified as Amblyomma variegatum, the main known vector of DUGV, collected in the southern part of the country (Kolda region). Interestingly, phylogenetic analysis indicates that the newly sequenced isolates are globally related to the previously characterized isolates in West Africa, thus highlighting potentially endemic, unnoticed viral transmission. This study was also an opportunity to develop a rapid and affordable protocol for full-genome sequencing of DUGV using nanopore technology. The results suggest a relatively low mutation rate and relatively conservative evolution of DUGV isolates.

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