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West Nile Virus: Insights into Microbiology, Epidemiology, and Clinical Burden

Andrea Marıno, Ermanno Vitale, Antonino Maniaci, Luigi La Via, Vittoria Moscatt, Serena Spampinato, Paola Senia, Emmanuele Venanzi Rullo, Vincenzo Restivo, Bruno Cacopardo, Giuseppe Nunnari

2025Acta Microbiologica Hellenica5 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

West Nile Virus (WNV), a mosquito-borne flavivirus first identified in Uganda in 1937, has emerged over the past quarter century as a major global public health threat. Since its introduction into North America in 1999, WNV has become the leading cause of arboviral neuroinvasive disease, with recurrent outbreaks continuing across Europe, Africa, and the Americas. This review provides a comprehensive overview of the microbiology, epidemiology, and clinical impact of WNV. We discuss the molecular biology of the virus, highlighting its genomic organization, replication strategies, and the structural and non-structural proteins that underpin viral pathogenesis and immune evasion. The complex enzootic transmission cycle, involving Culex mosquitoes and diverse avian reservoir hosts, is examined alongside ecological and climatic determinants of viral amplification and spillover into humans and equines. The clinical spectrum of WNV infection is outlined, ranging from asymptomatic seroconversion to West Nile fever and life-threatening neuroinvasive disease, with particular emphasis on risk factors for severe outcomes in older and immunocompromised individuals. Current approaches to diagnosis, supportive management, and vector control are critically reviewed, while challenges in vaccine development and the absence of effective antiviral therapy are underscored. Finally, we address future research priorities, including therapeutic innovation, predictive outbreak modeling, and genomic surveillance of viral evolution. WNV exemplifies the dynamics of emerging zoonotic diseases, and its persistence underscores the necessity of a coordinated One Health approach integrating human, animal, and environmental health. Continued scientific advances and public health commitment remain essential to mitigate its enduring global impact.

Topics & Concepts

Public healthFlavivirusWest Nile virusZika virusOutbreakVirologyEnzooticTransmission (telecommunications)ArbovirusSeroconversionOne HealthVector (molecular biology)Global healthEnvironmental healthCase fatality rateSafeguardingMedicineVaccinationChikungunyaCulexBiologyAlphavirus infectionMosquito controlDiseaseGeographyPublic health surveillanceMosquito-borne diseases and controlZoonotic diseases and public healthVibrio bacteria research studies