Med. Weter. 74 (11), 697-701, 2018
full text

| WIESŁAW NIEDBALSKI |
| BTV-vector-host interaction:
the epidemiological triangle in disease transmission |
| Understanding the interaction between the bluetongue virus (BTV), the Culicoides vector and the ruminant
host is essential to control bluetongue (BT). This triangle of interaction can be understood individually at the
level of the virus, the level of vector and the host level. BTV-vector-host interactions involve physiological
and ecological mechanisms, and they have evolved under a specific set of environmental conditions. Recent
advances in understanding this interaction include increased knowledge of the virus replication cycle, BTV
immunology and pathogenesis in the vertebrate host, as well as the virulence and pathogenicity features of
newly discovered BTV serotypes. To understand the virus-host-vector interaction, new molecular biology
techniques and experimental infection biology methods have been widely used. The next-generation sequencing,
the establishment of a reverse genetics system for the virus, and development of novel infection models and
refinement of the existing BTV experimental infection methodologies have proven very helpful. This progress
in biotechnology has also made it possible to develop new-generation BTV vaccines, such as disabled infectious
single cycle (DISC) vaccines and disabled infectious single animal (DISA) vaccines. However, several questions
still need to be answered, such as those concerning cellular pathways involved in the induction of innate
immunity and the function of NS4 in the BTV replication cycle. In addition, the identities of specific molecular
determinants and the role of quasi-species diversity in determining BTV phenotype are still unclear and should
be better explained.. |
| Key words: bluetongue virus, Culicoides vector, mammalian host, interaction |