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Study of Viral Coinfection of the Ticks Feeding on Humans in a Natural Focus of the South of the Far East

Overview
Journal Microorganisms
Specialty Microbiology
Date 2023 Jul 29
PMID 37512963
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Abstract

The phenomenon of pathogen co-infection detected in a half-fed tick taken from a human in the south of the Far East was studied. Research was carried out on , , and cell lines, outbred mice, and chicken embryos using ELISA, PCR, IMFA, plaque formation, and electron microscopy. The tick contained an antigen and a genetic marker of the tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV). The patient had post-vaccination antibodies in a titer of 1:200, as a result of which, obviously, an antibody-dependent elimination of TBEV occurred. The tick-borne co-isolate also contained an unknown pathogen ( virus), which, in our opinion, was a trigger for the activation of chronic infection in suckling white mice. In the laboratory co-isolate, ectromelia virus was present, as evidenced by paw edema during the intradermal infection of mice, characteristic rashes on the chorioallantoic envelope of chicken embryos, and typical plaques on Vero-E6. The virus was not pathogenic for white mice and chicken embryos, but it successfully multiplied in the , , and lines. Viral co-infection was confirmed by electron microscopy. Passaging on mice contributed to an increase in the virulence of the co-isolate, whose titer increased by 10,000 times by the fifth passage, which poses an epidemiological danger.

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