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Emergence potential of sylvatic dengue virus type 4 in the urban transmission cycle is restrained by vaccination and homotypic immunity. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Sylvatic dengue viruses (DENV) are distinct from human strains and exist in a wildlife transmission cycle, with evidence showing they can encounter humans, particularly in West Africa and Southeast Asia.
  • The risk of these sylvatic strains entering human transmission could complicate efforts to eradicate dengue with current vaccine developments.
  • Research indicates that while human immunity from natural infection or vaccination may provide strong defense against human DENV-4, it offers limited protection against sylvatic strains, suggesting the emergence of these strains in humans would be constrained by existing homotypic immunity.

Article Abstract

Sylvatic dengue viruses (DENV) are both evolutionarily and ecologically distinct from human DENV and are maintained in an enzootic transmission cycle. Evidence of sylvatic human infections from West Africa and Southeast Asia suggests that sylvatic DENV come into regular contact with humans. Thus, this potential of emergence into the human transmission cycle could limit the potential for eradicating this cycle with vaccines currently in late stages of development. We assessed the likelihood of sylvatic DENV-4 emergence in the face of natural immunity to current human strains and vaccination with two DENV-4 vaccine candidates. Our data indicate homotypic neutralization of sylvatic and human DENV-4 strains by human primary convalescent and vaccinee sera but limited heterotypic immunity. These results suggest that emergence of sylvatic strains into the human cycle would be limited by homotypic immunity mediated by virus neutralizing antibodies produced by natural infection or vaccination.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3622939PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.virol.2013.01.018DOI Listing

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