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Endogenous viral elements in mosquito genomes: current knowledge and outstanding questions

Umberto Palatini, Claudia Alfaro, Laila Gasmi, Mariangela Bonizzoni

2021Current Opinion in Insect Science30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Integrations from non-retroviral RNA viruses (nrEVEs) have been identified across several taxa, including mosquitoes. Amongst all Culicinae species, the viral vectors Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus stand out for their high number of nrEVEs. In addition, Aedes nrEVEs are enriched in piRNA clusters and generate piRNAs that can silence incoming viral genomes. As such, nrEVEs represent a new form of inherited antiviral immunity. To propel this discovery into novel transmission-blocking vector control strategies, a deeper understanding of nrEVE biology and evolution is essential because differences in the landscape of nrEVEs have been identified in wild-caught mosquitoes, the piRNA profile of nrEVEs is not homogeneous and nrEVEs outside piRNA clusters exist and are expressed at the mRNA level. Here we summarise current knowledge on nrEVEs in mosquitoes and we point out the many unanswered questions and potentials of these genomic elements.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyPiwi-interacting RNAGenomeAedes aegyptiAedes albopictusAedesVector (molecular biology)Evolutionary biologyComputational biologyGeneticsVirologyDengue feverTransposable elementEcologyGeneLarvaRecombinant DNAMosquito-borne diseases and controlInsect symbiosis and bacterial influencesPlant Virus Research Studies
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