Artículos de revistas
Detection of triatomine infection by Triatoma virus and horizontal transmission: Protecting insectaries and prospects for biological control
Fecha
2015-01Registro en:
Marti, Gerardo Anibal; Balsalobre, Agustin; Susevich, Maria Laura; Rabinovich, Jorge Eduardo; Echeverria, Maria Gabriela; Detection of triatomine infection by Triatoma virus and horizontal transmission: Protecting insectaries and prospects for biological control; Academic Press Inc Elsevier Science; Journal Of Invertebrate Pathology; 124; 1-2015; 57-60
0022-2011
Autor
Marti, Gerardo Anibal
Balsalobre, Agustin
Susevich, Maria Laura
Rabinovich, Jorge Eduardo
Echeverria, Maria Gabriela
Resumen
Triatoma virus (TrV) is the only triatomine entomopathogenic virus identified so far. Propagation of TrV in insectaries depends on handling procedures and triatomine population dynamics. The effects of propagation can be devastating and entire colonies must often be sacrificed to prevent spread of the virus throughout the insectary. This study found that after 41.3 days from TrV ingestion of human blood with 0.04 mg of viral protein by 5th instar Triatoma infestans, viral particles could be detected by RT-PCR; in a second horizontal transmission experiment time to detection resulted in a mean of 42.5 days. These results should rise awareness of TrV dynamics in nature, help estimate the spread of this virus when TrV-infected field-collected insects are incorporated into an insectary, and provide a base for the consideration of TrV as an agent of biological control of some species of triatomines.