A mosquito salivary protein-driven influx of myeloid cells facilitates flavivirus transmission

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Abstract

(Figure presented.) Mosquito saliva contains factors that promote flavivirus infection in the animal host. This study reveals that the mosquito salivary protein AaNRP mediates cutaneous recruitment of flavivirus-susceptible myeloid cells to mosquito bite sites, thus aiding flavivirus transmission. AaNRP is a female-mosquito-specific salivary protein. AaNRP stimulates skin-resident macrophages via TLR1/4-MyD88-NF-κB signaling to release chemoattractants for neutrophils. The AaNRP-induced influx of myeloid cells promotes flaviviral cutaneous infection. Dietary supplementation with resveratrol suppresses AaNRP-promoted flavivirus transmission by mosquitoes.

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Wang, Z., Nie, K., Liang, Y., Niu, J., Yu, X., Zhang, O., … Cheng, G. (2024). A mosquito salivary protein-driven influx of myeloid cells facilitates flavivirus transmission. EMBO Journal, 43(9), 1690–1721. https://doi.org/10.1038/s44318-024-00056-x

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