Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://open.uns.ac.rs/handle/123456789/14198
Title: Genetic diversity and population structure of Culex modestus across Europe: does recent appearance in the United Kingdom reveal a tendency for geographical spread?
Authors: Hernández-Triana L.
Brugman V.
Pramual P.
Barrero E.
Nikolova N.
Ruiz-Arrondo I.
Kaiser A.
Krüger A.
Lumley S.
Osório H.
Ignjatović Ćupina, Aleksandra 
Petrić, Dušan 
Laure Setier-Rio M.
Bødker R.
Johnson N.
Issue Date: 1-Jan-2019
Journal: Medical and Veterinary Entomology
Abstract: © 2019 The Royal Entomological Society In mainland Europe, the mosquito species Culex modestus Ficalbi (1890) is a bridge vector for West Nile virus (WNV) from its natural bird-mosquito cycle to mammals. The present study assessed the genetic diversity of Cx. modestus, as well as related Culex species, using the mitochondrial COI DNA barcoding region and compared this with the population structure across Europe. A haplotype network was mapped to determine genealogical relationships among specimens. The intraspecific genetic diversity within individual Culex species was below 2%, whereas the interspecific genetic divergence varied from 2.99% to 13.74%. In total, 76 haplotypes were identified among 198 sequences. A median-joining network determined from 198 COI sequences identified two major lineages that were separated by at least four mutation steps. A high level of intraspecific genetic diversity was not detected in Cx. modestus in samples submitted from different European populations, which indicates that morphologically identified specimens represent a single species and not a species complex. Therefore, it is deduced that different populations of Cx. modestus will show a similar potential to transmit WNV, lending support to concerns that the population present in southeast England represents a risk of transmission to humans.
URI: https://open.uns.ac.rs/handle/123456789/14198
ISSN: 0269283X
DOI: 10.1111/mve.12412
Appears in Collections:POLJF Publikacije/Publications

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