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ARS Home » Southeast Area » Gainesville, Florida » Center for Medical, Agricultural and Veterinary Entomology » Mosquito and Fly Research » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #208883

Title: Baculoviruses: Molecular Biology of Mosquito Baculoviruses

Author
item Becnel, James
item Afonso, Claudio

Submitted to: Elsevier
Publication Type: Peer Reviewed Journal
Publication Acceptance Date: 12/6/2007
Publication Date: 7/21/2008
Citation: Becnel, J.J., Afonso, C.L. 2008. Baculoviruses: Molecular Biology of Mosquito Baculoviruses. Encyclopedia of virology, 5 vols. (B.W.J. Mahy and M.H.V. Van Regenmortel, Editors), pp. 219-225 Oxford:Elsevier.

Interpretive Summary: None.

Technical Abstract: Baculoviruses found in mosquitoes have been assigned to the Nucleopolyhedroviruses and are of growing interest as they may represent a separate branch within the Baculoviridae that existed prior to the split of lepidopteran nucleopolyhedroviruses and granuloviruses. They may also be ancestral to the baculoviruses from hymenoptera which form a branch distinct from the lepidopteran baculoviruses. Mosquitoes are also important vectors of numerous human and veterinary diseases and baculoviruses offer the opportunity to investigate and understand specific virus-host interactions at the molecular level. Mosquito baculoviruses are restricted to larval midgut epithelial cells where development is initiated and completed resulting in death of the mosquito host in 72-96 hours. Transmission to the larval host is mediated by divalent cations with magnesium required for transmission while calcium is a potent inhibitor of transmission. Culex nigripalpus nucleopolyhedrovirus contains a circular double stranded DNA genome packaged into rod-shaped singly enveloped nucleocapsids. Complete nucleotide sequencing has determined a genomic size of 108,252 base pairs encoding at least 109 putative proteins. Striking differences in genome organization, the lack of conservation in gene order, the low level of amino acid conservation for homologous genes, and the absence of many genes that are conserved in other baculoviruses suggest that CuniNPV is a distant relative to lepidopteran and hymenopteran baculoviruses.