Medical Zoology Laboratory, Institute of Vertebrate Biology, Academy of Sciences, v.v.i., Brno, Czech Republic; Department of Experimental Biology, Faculty of Science, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic.
Medical Zoology Laboratory, Institute of Vertebrate Biology, Academy of Sciences, v.v.i., Brno, Czech Republic; Department of Experimental Biology, Faculty of Science, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic.
Adv Virus Res. 2014;89:201-75. doi: 10.1016/B978-0-12-800172-1.00005-7.
The objective of this chapter is to provide an updated and concise systematic review on taxonomy, history, arthropod vectors, vertebrate hosts, animal disease, and geographic distribution of all arboviruses known to date to cause disease in homeotherm (endotherm) vertebrates, except those affecting exclusively man. Fifty arboviruses pathogenic for animals have been documented worldwide, belonging to seven families: Togaviridae (mosquito-borne Eastern, Western, and Venezuelan equine encephalilitis viruses; Sindbis, Middelburg, Getah, and Semliki Forest viruses), Flaviviridae (mosquito-borne yellow fever, Japanese encephalitis, Murray Valley encephalitis, West Nile, Usutu, Israel turkey meningoencephalitis, Tembusu and Wesselsbron viruses; tick-borne encephalitis, louping ill, Omsk hemorrhagic fever, Kyasanur Forest disease, and Tyuleniy viruses), Bunyaviridae (tick-borne Nairobi sheep disease, Soldado, and Bhanja viruses; mosquito-borne Rift Valley fever, La Crosse, Snowshoe hare, and Cache Valley viruses; biting midges-borne Main Drain, Akabane, Aino, Shuni, and Schmallenberg viruses), Reoviridae (biting midges-borne African horse sickness, Kasba, bluetongue, epizootic hemorrhagic disease of deer, Ibaraki, equine encephalosis, Peruvian horse sickness, and Yunnan viruses), Rhabdoviridae (sandfly/mosquito-borne bovine ephemeral fever, vesicular stomatitis-Indiana, vesicular stomatitis-New Jersey, vesicular stomatitis-Alagoas, and Coccal viruses), Orthomyxoviridae (tick-borne Thogoto virus), and Asfarviridae (tick-borne African swine fever virus). They are transmitted to animals by five groups of hematophagous arthropods of the subphyllum Chelicerata (order Acarina, families Ixodidae and Argasidae-ticks) or members of the class Insecta: mosquitoes (family Culicidae); biting midges (family Ceratopogonidae); sandflies (subfamily Phlebotominae); and cimicid bugs (family Cimicidae). Arboviral diseases in endotherm animals may therefore be classified as: tick-borne (louping ill and tick-borne encephalitis, Omsk hemorrhagic fever, Kyasanur Forest disease, Tyuleniy fever, Nairobi sheep disease, Soldado fever, Bhanja fever, Thogoto fever, African swine fever), mosquito-borne (Eastern, Western, and Venezuelan equine encephalomyelitides, Highlands J disease, Getah disease, Semliki Forest disease, yellow fever, Japanese encephalitis, Murray Valley encephalitis, West Nile encephalitis, Usutu disease, Israel turkey meningoencephalitis, Tembusu disease/duck egg-drop syndrome, Wesselsbron disease, La Crosse encephalitis, Snowshoe hare encephalitis, Cache Valley disease, Main Drain disease, Rift Valley fever, Peruvian horse sickness, Yunnan disease), sandfly-borne (vesicular stomatitis-Indiana, New Jersey, and Alagoas, Cocal disease), midge-borne (Akabane disease, Aino disease, Schmallenberg disease, Shuni disease, African horse sickness, Kasba disease, bluetongue, epizootic hemorrhagic disease of deer, Ibaraki disease, equine encephalosis, bovine ephemeral fever, Kotonkan disease), and cimicid-borne (Buggy Creek disease). Animals infected with these arboviruses regularly develop a febrile disease accompanied by various nonspecific symptoms; however, additional severe syndromes may occur: neurological diseases (meningitis, encephalitis, encephalomyelitis); hemorrhagic symptoms; abortions and congenital disorders; or vesicular stomatitis. Certain arboviral diseases cause significant economic losses in domestic animals-for example, Eastern, Western and Venezuelan equine encephalitides, West Nile encephalitis, Nairobi sheep disease, Rift Valley fever, Akabane fever, Schmallenberg disease (emerged recently in Europe), African horse sickness, bluetongue, vesicular stomatitis, and African swine fever; all of these (except for Akabane and Schmallenberg diseases) are notifiable to the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE, 2012).
本章的目的是提供一个最新和简明的系统综述,涵盖所有已知的能够引起恒温(内温)脊椎动物疾病的虫媒病毒的分类学、历史、节肢动物媒介、脊椎动物宿主、动物疾病以及地理分布信息,但不包括专门影响人类的病毒。全世界已记录了 50 种对动物致病的虫媒病毒,它们属于七个科:披膜病毒科(蚊媒东方、西方和委内瑞拉马脑炎病毒;辛德毕斯、米德尔堡、盖塔、和森姆利基森林病毒)、黄病毒科(蚊媒黄热病、日本脑炎、马堡病毒、西尼罗河、乌苏图、以色列土耳其脑膜炎、坦布苏和韦塞尔斯布隆病毒;蜱媒脑炎、莱姆病、奥姆斯特克出血热、基桑诺森林病和图亚尼病毒)、布尼亚病毒科(蜱媒内罗毕绵羊病、士兵病毒和班贾病毒;蚊媒裂谷热、拉科罗拉、雪鞋野兔和卡奇谷病毒;蚋媒马传染性贫血、阿卡班、阿尼诺、舒尼和施马伦贝格病毒)、呼肠孤病毒科(蚋媒非洲马瘟、卡巴、蓝舌病、鹿流行性出血热、伊巴利、马传染性脑脊髓炎、秘鲁马病和云南病毒)、弹状病毒科(沙蝇/蚊媒牛暂短热、口蹄疫印第安纳、新泽西、阿拉戈斯和科卡尔病毒)、正粘病毒科(蜱媒托哥病毒)和丝状病毒科(蜱媒非洲猪瘟病毒)。这些病毒通过节肢动物门螯肢亚门(目蜱螨目,科硬蜱科和软蜱科)或昆虫纲的五个吸血节肢动物群传播给动物:蚊子(蚊科);蚋(蚋科);沙蝇(白蛉亚科);和吸血虱(吸血虱科)。因此,内温动物的虫媒病毒病可分为:蜱媒(莱姆病和蜱传脑炎、奥姆斯特克出血热、基桑诺森林病、图亚尼热、内罗毕绵羊病、士兵热、班贾热、托哥热、非洲猪瘟)、蚊媒(东方、西方和委内瑞拉马脑炎、高地 J 病、盖塔病、森姆利基森林病、黄热病、日本脑炎、马堡病毒、西尼罗河脑炎、乌苏图病、以色列土耳其脑膜炎、坦布苏病/鸭胚死亡综合征、韦塞尔斯布隆病、拉科罗拉脑炎、雪鞋野兔脑炎、卡奇谷病、马传染性贫血、裂谷热、秘鲁马病、云南病)、沙蝇媒(口蹄疫印第安纳、新泽西和阿拉戈斯、科卡尔病)、蚋媒(阿卡班病、阿尼诺病、施马伦贝格病、舒尼病、非洲马瘟、卡巴病、蓝舌病、鹿流行性出血热、伊巴利病、马传染性脑脊髓炎、牛暂短热、科顿坎病)和吸血虱媒(布基溪病)。感染这些虫媒病毒的动物通常会出现发热性疾病,并伴有各种非特异性症状;然而,可能会出现更严重的综合征:神经系统疾病(脑膜炎、脑炎、脑脊髓炎);出血症状;流产和先天障碍;或口蹄疫。某些虫媒病毒病会给家畜造成重大经济损失,例如,东方、西方和委内瑞拉马脑炎、西尼罗河脑炎、内罗毕绵羊病、裂谷热、阿卡班热、施马伦贝格病(最近在欧洲出现)、非洲马瘟、蓝舌病、口蹄疫和非洲猪瘟;除了阿卡班病和施马伦贝格病,所有这些病都必须向世界动物卫生组织(OIE,2012 年)报告。