Abstract
Transmission from an infected mosquito to a host is an essential process in the life cycle of mosquito-borne flaviviruses. Numerous studies have demonstrated that mosquito saliva facilitates viral transmission. Here we find that a saliva-specific protein, named Aedes aegypti venom allergen-1 (AaVA-1), promotes dengue and Zika virus transmission by activating autophagy in host immune cells of the monocyte lineage. The AG6 mice (ifnar1–/–ifngr1–/–) bitten by the virus-infected AaVA-1-deficient mosquitoes present a lower viremia and prolonged survival. AaVA-1 intracellularly interacts with a dominant negative binder of Beclin-1, known as leucine-rich pentatricopeptide repeat-containing protein (LRPPRC), and releases Beclin-1 from LRPPRC-mediated sequestration, thereby enabling the initialization of downstream autophagic signaling. A deficiency in Beclin-1 reduces viral infection in mice and abolishes AaVA-1-mediated enhancement of ZIKV transmission by mosquitoes. Our study provides a mechanistic insight into saliva-aided viral transmission and could offer a potential prophylactic target for reducing flavivirus transmission.
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Introduction
Flavivirus is a genus of single-stranded RNA viruses that are often transmitted by arthropod vectors, such as ticks and mosquitoes. Mosquito-borne flaviviruses, including dengue (DENV), Zika (ZIKV), yellow fever, and West Nile (WNV) viruses, cause hundreds of millions of infection cases annually and act as the etiological agents of human hemorrhagic fever, encephalitis, and meningitis1. DENV, which is transmitted by Aedes aegypti, is the widest spreading arbovirus worldwide2. There are more than 100 dengue-endemic countries in the world; ~390 million people are infected by DENV every year, mostly in tropical countries2. ZIKV is another mosquito-borne flavivirus and is transmitted to humans by Aedes mosquito species3. Several neurological complications, such as Guillain-Barré syndrome in adults and microcephaly in neonates, are potentially associated with ZIKV infection4,5,6. Mosquito-borne flaviviruses maintain a life cycle between mosquitoes and susceptible hosts in which viral transmission from an infected mosquito to a host is an essential process for viral survival in nature7. Through viral transmission, the infectious virions are injected into the host dermis by a mosquito bite8 and then robustly replicate in dermal-residing monocyte-lineage immune cells9,10,11, thereby establishing the initial infection in hosts. Subsequently, the viruses are released from the infected immune cells into the blood circulation for systemic dissemination in hosts12.
Mosquito saliva, containing proteins with angiogenic, antihemostatic, anti-inflammatory, and immunomodulatory properties, is inoculated together with viruses into the host during viral transmission13,14. Numerous studies have demonstrated that mosquito saliva can facilitate viral transmission and contribute to the subsequent disease sequelae. For example, inoculation of WNV together with salivary gland extract (SGE) results in higher viremia and faster neuroinvasion compared with WNV inoculation alone via needles15. Mice bitten by infected mosquitoes develop higher and sustained DENV viremia compared with those infected by direct needle injection16, suggesting that the salivary proteins promote flavivirus transmission and pathogenesis in bitten hosts. Nonetheless, the underlying mechanisms of salivary proteins in flaviviral transmission remain to be understood.
Autophagy is an evolutionarily conserved stress-responsive cytosolic process that disposes of unnecessary or dysfunctional cellular components17. In mammals, autophagy initiation starts with the activation of the ULK1 (unc-51 like autophagy activating kinase 1) complex18. The ULK1 complex consists of ULK1 itself and the non-catalytic subunits FIP200 (RB1 inducible coiled-coil 1), ATG13 (autophagy-related 13), and ATG101. The ULK1–ATG13–FIP200–ATG101 complex is present mainly in the cytosol under nutrient-rich conditions and is inactivated by mTORC1 (mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1)19. Occurring just downstream of ULK1 activation, phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3KC3) class III phosphorylates the lipid head group of phosphatidylinositol to generate phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate, which is essential for canonical autophagosome formation. PI3KC3 forms at least two distinct complexes known as complex I and II (PI3KC3-C1 and PI3KC3-C2)20. Both complexes contain VPS34 (PI3KC3 catalytic subunit type 3), VPS15 (phosphoinositide-3-kinase regulatory subunit 4), and Beclin-1. PI3KC3-C1 contains ATG14, which directs the complex to phagophore initiation sites to facilitate elongation20. PI3KC3-C2 contains UVRAG (UV radiation resistance-associated gene), which directs endosome and autophagosome maturation21. The autophagosome is delivered to lysosomes for degradation.
In this study, we screen the roles of A. aegypti salivary proteins during DENV and ZIKV infection of human immune cells, and find that A. aegypti venom allergen-1 (AaVA-1) acts as a female mosquito saliva-specific protein to promote flaviviral transmission through the activation of host autophagy, which promotes infections by many viruses in the Flaviviridae family22,23,24. Our mechanistic study indicates that AaVA-1 competes with an autophagy inhibitor, leucine-rich pentatricopeptide repeat (PPR)-containing protein (LRPPRC), thereby enabling the activation of autophagic signaling.
Results
AaVA-1 promotes flavivirus infection in human immune cells
Mosquito salivary proteins are intradermally inoculated with viruses into a host simultaneously through a mosquito bite. However, the roles of mosquito salivary proteins in flavivirus infection remain to be comprehensively investigated. Therefore, we collected A. aegypti saliva by sucrose meals with an in vitro membrane feeding system25 and then identified the proteins by SDS–polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) and mass spectrometry (Fig. 1a). Seventy-one proteins were identified from the A. aegypti saliva (Supplementary Table 1). Subsequently, 42 genes with the score more than 25 in mass spectrometry were selected (Supplementary Table 1), in which 32 genes were successfully cloned and expressed in Drosophila S2 cells (Fig. 1b). The conditioned supernatants with recombinant salivary proteins were mixed with either ZIKV or DENV to infect a human monocytic cell line THP-1. Notably, incubation of salivary proteins encoded by AAEL000793, AAEL002693, AAEL005672, and AAEL006417 genes resulted in a robust replication (p < 0.05) of both ZIKV (Fig. 1c) and DENV (Fig. 1d) in THP-1 cells, suggesting a susceptibility role of these proteins in viral transmission.
The viruses inoculated by mosquitoes primarily infect dermal-resident monocyte-lineage cells8,9,11. The viruses are then released from the primary infected cells into the blood circulation, thereby causing subsequent viremia and diseases (Supplementary Fig. 1A). We next examined whether these salivary proteins could regulate viral replication in dendritic cells (moDC) and macrophages (moMØ) derived from human monocytes26,27. The identified salivary genes (AAEL000793, AAEL005672, AAEL006417, and AAEL002693) were silenced in A. aegypti by double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) thoracic inoculation (Supplementary Fig. 1B–E). The SGE of mock-treated mosquitoes facilitated DENV and ZIKV infection in both moDC and moMØ, while silencing these genes impaired the SGE-mediated enhancement of both DENV and ZIKV infection. Knockdown of AAEL000793 resulted in the greatest reduction (Fig. 1e, f). AAEL000793 is a member of a multigene family annotated as venom allergen. There are multiple venom allergen paralogs in A. aegypti identified by sequence comparison (Supplementary Table 2). Notably, incubation of a protein encoded by AAEL002693, a paralog of AAEL000793 (42% amino acid identity), also facilitated infection by ZIKV and DENV (Fig. 1c–f), further suggesting the pro-viral role of the mosquito salivary venom allergen during flaviviral transmission28. As genetic manipulation of AAEL000793 consistently presented the most dramatic phenotype among all these salivary genes, we selected AAEL000793 for further investigation and therefore designated AAEL000793 as AaVA-1 throughout this study.
To further validate the role of AaVA-1 in these flaviviral infections, we expressed and purified AaVA-1 in Drosophila S2 cells (Fig. 2a). The purified AaVA-1 enhanced the replication of ZIKV (Fig. 2b) and DENV (Fig. 2c) in THP-1 cells in a dose-dependent manner. Intriguingly, AaVA-1 was specifically expressed in the salivary glands of female A. aegypti (Supplementary Fig. 2A) rather than male mosquitoes (Supplementary Fig. 2B). AaVA-1 was not induced by DENV and ZIKV infections in mosquito salivary glands (Supplementary Fig. 3A–C). We further detected AaVA-1 expression in the salivary glands of female mosquitoes 4 days after a blood meal. Compared with that of sugar-fed mosquitoes, the expression of AaVA-1 did not change in the salivary glands of blood-fed mosquitoes (Supplementary Fig. 3D). We next examined whether AaVA-1 could enhance viral replication in moDC and moMØ derived from human monocytes26,27. Incubation of AaVA-1 enhanced the replication of ZIKV and DENV in human moDC (Fig. 2d) and moMØ (Fig. 2e). Consistently, the SGE of wild-type A. aegypti (WT-SGE) facilitated DENV and ZIKV infection in both moDC (Fig. 3f) and moMØ (Fig. 3g), whereas immuno-blockade of AaVA-1 by a murine polyclonal antibody (Supplementary Fig. 4) impaired the SGE-mediated viral enhancement (Fig. 3f, g), further validating susceptibility pro-viral role of AaVA-1 in flaviviral infection of human immune cells. Given the genetic variations among human individuals, we next assessed the role of AaVA-1 in flavivirus infection of immune cells from different individual donors. AaVA-1 universally enhanced both DENV (Supplementary Fig. 5A) and ZIKV (Supplementary Fig. 5B) infections in monocytes from several individuals. Taken together, AaVA-1 is a mosquito salivary protein that promotes flaviviral replication in human monocyte-lineage immune cells.
AaVA-1 facilitates flaviviral transmission to mice
We next assessed the role of AaVA-1 in flaviviral transmission in a type I/II interferon receptor-deficient (ifnar1–/–ifngr1–/–) C57BL/6 (AG6) mouse model that was established in previous studies29. First, we subcutaneously inoculated the purified AaVA-1 with ZIKV into the footpads of AG6 mice (Fig. 3a). Inoculation of AaVA-1 augmented ZIKV viremia (Fig. 3b) and accelerated animal death (Fig. 3c), indicating that AaVA-1 is a salivary factor promoting ZIKV infection and pathogenesis in the host. Next, we assessed the role of AaVA-1 in viral transmission using a “mosquito-AG6 mouse” transmission model (Fig. 3d). The AaVA-1 gene was silenced by dsRNA thoracic microinjection in A. aegypti salivary glands (Fig. 3e, f). Three days post gene silencing, the dsRNA-treated mosquitoes were thoracically infected with ZIKV. These infected mosquitoes were allowed to bite AG6 mice. Mouse viremia and survival were subsequently recorded every day after mosquito biting (Fig. 3d). Silencing of the AaVA-1 gene did not influence the ZIKV load in the mosquito salivary glands (Fig. 3g). Notably, AG6 mice that were bitten by the AaVA-1-silenced ZIKV-infected mosquitoes had lower viremia (Fig. 3h) and survived longer (Fig. 3i) than the animals bitten by control mosquitoes (GFP dsRNA), indicating that AaVA-1 plays an important role in flavivirus transmission by mosquitoes.
Next, we identified a homolog of AaVA-1 with the highest identity in the Aedes albopictus genome (AalbVA-1) (Supplementary Fig. 6A). The recombinant AalbVA-1 was expressed and purified in Drosophila S2 cells (Supplementary Fig. 6B). Incubation of AalbVA-1 enhanced infection by ZIKV in both moDC (Supplementary Fig. 6c) and moMØ (Supplementary Fig. 6D) from different human donors. We next validated the role of AalbVA-1 in flaviviral transmission in a mosquito-biting model. Knockdown of AalbVA-1 (Supplementary Fig. 6E, F) did not alter ZIKV replication in the A. albopictus salivary glands (Supplementary Fig. 6G); however, AalbVA-1 deficiency in mosquito saliva impaired ZIKV viremia in mice (Supplementary Fig. 6H) and delayed animal death (Supplementary Fig. 6I). Taken together, the Aedes VA-1 protein generally plays a pro-viral role in flaviviral transmission.
AaVA-1 activates autophagy to promote flaviviral infection
Mosquito saliva is able to modulate the host inflammatory immune response12,28,30,31. Therefore, we assessed AaVA-1-mediated cytokine regulation. Incubation of AaVA-1 in THP-1 cells did not influence the expression of tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α), interleukin-1β (IL-1β), IL-8, monocyte chemotactic protein-1 (MCP-1), interferon-beta (IFN-β), interferon-alpha 2 (IFN-α2), IFN-α7 or macrophage inflammatory protein-1α (MIP-1α) (Supplementary Fig. 7), indicating that the AaVA-1-mediated enhancement of infection may not be attributed to the regulation of host immune responses. In addition, AaVA-1 did not directly interact with the purified envelope protein of DENV (Supplementary Fig. 8).
Autophagy is a well-known cell-intrinsic pathway that regulates flaviviral infection. A deficiency in the autophagic pathway interrupts the replication of DENV22, ZIKV24, Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV)32 and hepatitis C virus (HCV)33 in human cells. We next assessed the role of AaVA-1 in the activation of autophagy in human monocyte-lineage immune cells. AaVA-1 induced the conversion of LC3B-I into LC3B-II in THP-1 cells (Fig. 4a) and the accumulation of LC3B-positive puncta in human moDC and moMØ (Supplementary Fig. 9A). Indeed, enhancement of LC3B-II and LC3B-positive puncta formation may be attributed to either activation of autophagy or decreased degradation of autophagic membrane stabilization34. Bafilomycin A1 (Baf-A1) is a known inhibitor of the late phase of autophagy that prevents the degradation of autophagic vacuoles by inhibiting fusion between autophagosomes and lysosomes35. Treatment with Baf-A1 increased the accumulation of LC3B-II and LC3B-positive puncta upon AaVA-1 exposure (Fig. 4a and Supplementary Fig. 9B), suggesting that AaVa-1-mediated activation of autophagy contributed to the enhancement of autophagy rather than the impairment of lysosome-mediated autophagosome degradation. 3-Methyladenine (3-MA) is an autophagy antagonist to inhibit autophagic signaling by blocking the VPS34/PI3 kinase complex24. Consistently, the interruption of autophagy by 3-MA impaired the AaVA-1-mediated ZIKV enhancement in moDC (Fig. 4b), moMØ (Fig. 4c), and THP-1 cells (Fig. 4d). Conversely, an autophagy inducer, rapamycin (RAPA)24 as a positive control, increased ZIKV replication in these cells. AaVA-1 presented a similar role in DENV infection of these human immune cells (Supplementary Fig. 9C–E). To mimic the physiological conditions, human moMØ cells were incubated with either ΔAaVA-1-SGE or WT-SGE for immunofluorescence staining. AaVA-1-knockdown SGE failed to induce autophagy and ZIKV replication as WT-SGE did in the primary immune cells (Fig. 4e-f), demonstrating that the autophagy-inducing and pro-viral feature of AaVA-1 is common to DENV and ZIKV. Autophagy has been described to restrict cytosolic DNA and RNA sensors36. We therefore assessed the role of AaVA-1 in infection of other arboviruses. AaVA-1 did not regulate Batai virus (Orthobunyavirus, Bunyaviridae family) infection (Supplementary Fig. 10A); however, AaVA-1 enhanced the Semliki Forest virus (Alphavirus, Togaviridae family) burden in human immune cells (Supplementary Fig. 10B), suggesting that either AaVA-1 or AaVA-1-mediated autophagic signaling may play distinct roles in the infection of arboviruses from different families37.
To investigate the mechanism by which AaVA-1 starts autophagy, we assessed the location of AaVA-1 in human immune cells. Either human moDC or moMØ cells were incubated with the purified AaVA-1 to detect the cellular distribution of AaVA-1 through an immunofluorescence assay. Intriguingly, AaVA-1 was found in the cytoplasm of human immune cells (Supplementary Fig. 11A), suggesting that AaVA-1 may be taken up by immune cells. We next investigated how AaVA-1, an external protein from mosquito saliva, gains access into human cells. AaVA-1 is most likely delivered into human immune cells by endocytosis. Endocytic pathways are classified into three types by their dependence on the lipid rafts. (i) Pathways that do not involve lipid rafts in the endocytic vesicle, namely clathrin-mediated endocytosis (CME). (ii) Endocytic pathways for which the endocytic vesicle contains lipid rafts together with non-raft membrane domains, such as phagocytosis. (iii) Endocytic pathways taking place in lipid rafts in a clathrin-independent manner, such as caveolae-mediated, flotillin-dependent, Cdc42-dependent, Arf6-dependent, and RhoA-dependent endocytosis38. The staining showed that AaVA-1 attached to the surface of the human macrophages at 4 °C incubation (Fig. 5a). Nonetheless, AaVA-1 was quickly internalized into cells, and colocalized with RhoA after 5 min of incubation at 37 °C (Fig. 5a). Indeed, functional blockade of RhoA by its inhibitor Rhosin39 suppressed AaVA-1-mediated enhancement of ZIKV infection in THP-1 cells (Fig. 5b). Consistent with this result, small interfering RNA (siRNA)-mediated silencing of RhoA reduced ZIKV infection in the AaVA-1 incubated THP-1 cells (Fig. 5c and Supplementary Fig. 11B). Altogether, AaVA-1 is endocytosed into human immune cells in a RhoA-dependent manner.
We next investigated the intracellular localization of AaVA-1 after endocytosis. In this experiment, the human monocyte-derived macrophages were incubated with AaVA-1 and then the cells were collected to stain cell organelles, such as early endosome (Rab5), late endosome (Rab7), Golgi (GM130), endoplasmic reticulum (Calnexin), lysosome (Lamp1), and mitochondria (Tom20), in a time course post incubation. AaVA-1 was colocalized with the early and late endosomes at 10 and 30 min post incubation (Supplementary Fig. 11C). AaVA-1 colocalized with Tom20 at 6 h post incubation, suggesting that the intracellular trafficking route of AaVA-1 is to escape from endosome to mitochondria (Supplementary Fig. 11C).
AaVA-1 liberates Beclin-1 from the LRPPRC-bound state
Given that AaVA-1 plays a role in flaviviral infection of THP-1 cells, we next identified the AaVA-1-binding proteins in THP-1 cell lysates through an immuno-pulldown assay (Supplementary Fig. 12A). The bound proteins were separated by SDS–PAGE and subsequently characterized by a liquid chromatograph-mass spectrophotometry assay (LC-MS). Overlapping proteins pulled down also in the control were excluded. The AaVA-1-binding proteins with a score >30 in the LC-MS assay were further investigated (Supplementary Table 3). Intriguingly, an autophagy inhibitor, named LRPPRC, was pulled down by AaVA-1 (Supplementary Fig. 12B). Previous studies indicated that LRPPRC acts as a Beclin-1 suppressor through directly interacting with and preventing Beclin-1 from PI3KCIII-mediated autophagy initiation40,41,42. The interaction between AaVA-1 and LRPPRC was validated by co-immunoprecipitation (co-IP) (Supplementary Fig. 12C). We further validated colocalization between endogenous AaVA-1 of A. aegypti SGE with endogenous LRPPRC in human primary moMØ cells (Supplementary Fig. 12D). LRPPRC is mainly located on mitochondria43. Confocal microscopy demonstrated that a high level of LRPPRC was present on mitochondria and a substantial amount of AaVA-1 co-stained with LRPPRC and a mitochondrial marker (Tom20) at 6 h post incubation (Fig. 5d). We next expressed and purified the LRPPRC recombinant protein in human 293F cells (Fig. 5e). AaVA-1 interacted with LRPPRC in a dose-dependent manner (Fig. 5f). To further determine the binding regions of LRPPRC to AaVA-1, we next constructed four truncations of LRPPRC (T1: 1–337 aa; T2: 338–711 aa; T3: 712–1067 aa; T4: 1068–1394 aa). The LRPPRC-T3 fragment (712–1067 aa) was responsible for the interaction with AaVA-1 (Supplementary Fig. 12E). In addition, AaVA-1 directly interacted with the purified LRPPRC-T3 fragment (Supplementary Fig. 12F–G). Altogether, our data suggest that AaVA-1 directly binds to LRPPRC on the mitochondria.
LRPPRC is a member of PPR protein family44. The PPR proteins constitute a large family of RNA-binding proteins that contain a canonical 35 residue repeat motif45. There are seven proteins with PPR domains in human (Supplementary Fig. 13A)44. To further investigate the binding specificity between AaVAs and human PPRs, we next selected a paralogue of the AaVA gene, AaVA-9 (AAEL009695), an AaVA subtype predominantly expressed in the mosquito head and hemolymph (Supplementary Fig. 13B), and a member of the PPR family, named PTCD1 (PPR-containing protein-1), for the investigation. AaVA-1 and AaVA-9 were expressed in Drosophila S2 cells, while human LRPPRC and PTCD1 were ectopically generated in human 293T cells. LRPPRC but not PTCD1 efficiently pulled down AaVA-1 (Supplementary Fig. 13C). Consistent with this result, AaVA-1 but not AaVA-9 specifically interacted with LRPPRC (Supplementary Fig. 13D). Overall, our results demonstrate that the interaction between AaVA-1 and LRPPRC is specific and direct.
LRPPRC is a dominant negative interactor of Beclin-1 to suppress autophagy initiation40,41,42. We next investigated whether AaVA-1 might release Beclin-1 from the LRPPRC-bound state. Indeed, LRPPRC co-precipitated with Beclin-1 using an anti-LRPPRC antibody. In the presence of purified recombinant AaVA-1, the amount of Beclin-1 pulled down by LRPPRC reduced significantly; while a significant amount of AaVA-1 was co-immunoprecipitated by LRPPRC (Supplementary Fig. 14A, left panel). We next precipitated Beclin-1 and its bound LRPPRC. The amount of LRPPRC bound by Beclin-1 was decreased by purified AaVA-1 (Supplementary Fig. 14A, right panel). We also noted that Beclin-1 did not pull down AaVA-1. The aforementioned study identified that AaVA-1 directly interacts with the purified LRPPRC-T3 fragment (Supplementary Fig. 12G). We next asked if Beclin-1 also binds the T3 domain of LRPPRC using purified human Beclin-1. Indeed, Beclin-1 bound LRPPRC-T3, and this interaction was interrupted by AaVA-1 (Supplementary Fig. 14B-C), further indicating that AaVA-1 directly interacts with LRPPRC and displaces Beclin-1 by competing for the same binding motif in LRPPRC. We then examined whether native salivary AaVA-1 had a similar function as the recombinant AaVA-1. Indeed, Beclin-1 pulled down more LRPPRC in the presence of AaVA-1-deficient SGE (ΔAaVA-1-SGE) than WT-SGE (Fig. 5g). This phenomenon was further validated in the physiological condition. In human moMØ cells, native Beclin-1 colocalized with LRPPRC on mitochondria very well. The co-localizations were disrupted on mitochondria of the cells treated with WT-SGE, but remained intact in ΔAaVA-1-SGE-treated cells (Fig. 5h). These results collectively indicate that AaVA-1 competes with Beclin-1 for LRPPRC, thereby enabling to liberate Beclin-1 from the LRPPRC-bound state to initiate autophagy process (Supplementary Fig. 14D).
Indeed, Beclin-1 is not only involved in autophagy, but also LC3-associated phagocytosis (LAP)46. LAP can process engulfed particles, including pathogens, immune complexes, and dying cells, to regulate macrophage immune responses17,46. Unlike canonical autophagy, LAP does not require the components of the pre-initiation complex that trigger autophagy in response to nutrient stress (ULK1, FIP200, and ATG13). Nonetheless, LAP requires the Beclin-1 and VPS34 initiation complex that contains Rubicon (Run domain Beclin-1 interacting and cysteine-rich containing protein)17,46. We showed that Beclin-1 is released by AaVA-1 from LRPPRC-mediated sequestration. We next investigated whether the released Beclin-1 could also take part in the LAP process, which may facilitate the viral entry. Indeed, siRNA-mediated knockdown of FIP200, a gene encoding an essential factor in canonical autophagy, reduced ZIKV infection in the AaVA-1-incubated THP-1 cells (Supplementary Fig. 15A, B). However, silencing Rubicon, a participant in Beclin-1- mediated LAP, did not impair ZIKV load and even slightly enhanced the viral infection in the AaVA-1 incubated cells (Supplementary Fig. 15C, D). We next assessed whether AaVA-1-mediated release of Beclin-1 might regulate viral entry or assembly of the flavivirus replication compartment. First, we assessed whether Beclin-1 influenced ZIKV attachment on the surface of human immune cells. At 4 °C the virions are tethered on the cell surface, but not internalized47. Compared to the mock control, genetic suppression of Beclin-1 did not influence ZIKV attachment on the surface of THP-1 cells (Supplementary Fig. 15E). We next investigated the role of Beclin-1 in viral internalization. ZIKV was incubated with either the Beclin-1-silenced THP-1 cells or the control siRNA-treated cells at 37 °C for 2 h, and viral loads were quantified after stringent washes. The viral load was not affected by knockdown of Beclin-1 (Supplementary Fig. 15F). To further address that, we assessed the effect of both viral attachment and internalization in THP-1 cells with or without AaVA-1 incubation. AaVA-1 did not regulate ZIKV attachment and internalization (Supplementary Fig. 15G, H), indicating that AaVA-1 does not play a role in autophagy-related phagocytosis. In addition, previous studies have indicated that HCV utilizes autophagosomal membranes as sites for its RNA replication33. However, ZIKV dsRNA, which represents the viral replication compartment, did not co-localize with the LC3B-positive puncta in the AaVA-1-incubated macrophages, suggesting that the AaVA-1-mediated initiation of autophagy may not directly affect the assembly of the flaviviral replication compartment (Supplementary Fig. 16A). Overall, we concluded that AaVA-1-mediated Beclin-1 release facilitates flaviviral infection by activating canonical autophagy but not by initiating LAP-mediated viral entry or the assembly of the flavivirus replication compartment.
We next assessed whether genetic manipulation of LRPPRC and Beclin-1 influenced AaVA-1-mediated autophagy activation. In human cells, AaVA-1 treatment increased LC3B-II levels and viral (ZIKV/DENV) replication, which were however inhibited by either ectopic expression of LRPPRC (Fig. 6a, c, d) or siRNA-mediated knockdown of Beclin-1 (Fig. 6b, e, f). Next, we assessed these phenotypes using a gene knockout mouse model. Given the essential roles of these autophagy factors in animal development48, neither lrpprc–/– nor Beclin-1–/– mice survive the embryonic stage45,49. Nonetheless, heterozygous Beclin-1+/– mice develop normally. We therefore generated a Beclin-1+/–ifnar1–/–ifngr1–/– (Beclin-1+/–AG6) mouse line by cross-breeding the Beclin-1+/– and ifnar1–/–ifngr1–/– strains (Supplementary Fig. 17A, B). The Beclin-1+/–AG6 mice showed a lower autophagy activity than the Beclin-1+/+AG6 control mice (Supplementary Fig. 17C). We next assessed whether AaVA-1 promoted ZIKV transmission to the Beclin-1-deficient mice, through an “A. aegypti-mouse” transmission model. The AaVA-1 gene was silenced by thoracic microinjection of dsRNA in A. aegypti, and subsequently thoracically infected with ZIKV. After rearing for an additional 8 days, both the Beclin-1+/– and Beclin-1+/+ AG6 mice were subjected to a blood meal by the infected mosquitoes (Fig. 6g). Both ZIKV viremia and mortality were recorded daily after mosquito biting. The Beclin-1+/–AG6 mice (blue) had lower ZIKV viremia (Fig. 6h) and prolonged survival (Fig. 6i) than the Beclin-1+/+AG6 mice (red) bitten by GFP-dsRNA-treated ZIKV-carrying mosquitoes. However, the Beclin-1+/–AG6 mice that were bitten by the AaVA-1 dsRNA-treated mosquitoes (violet) did not present any significant difference in ZIKV viremia or mortality compared with the GFP dsRNA-treated mosquitoes (blue) (Fig. 6h, i). These data indicate that the pro-viral effect of AaVA-1 in flaviviral transmission is dependent on the Beclin-1-mediated autophagy.
Discussion
Mosquito-borne flaviviruses have evolved sophisticated strategies to efficiently survive in two dramatically different environments7,29. Viral transmission from an infected mosquito to a susceptible mammalian host is an essential step in the flaviviral lifecycle. Accumulated evidence indicates that mosquito salivary proteins can manipulate host cellular and immune responses, which enhances viral transmission efficiency15,16,30,50. A 34 kDa protein from A. aegypti saliva enhances DENV replication in human keratinocytes by suppressing interferon expression28. Recently, a study has shown that an A. aegypti salivary factor LTRIN could facilitate ZIKV transmission by interfering with nuclear factor-κB signaling and the downstream inflammatory cytokine production30. An antiserum against A. aegypti salivary protein AgBR1 partially protected mice from lethal mosquito-borne ZIKV infection by suppressing early inflammatory responses in skin50. Passive immunization against A. aegypti NeSt1 prevented macrophages from infiltrating the bite site and ameliorated ZIKV-induced pathogenesis in mice31. In addition to regulating host immune responses, mosquito saliva may enhance viral infection of host cells directly. A serine protease in A. aegypti saliva has been shown to augment DENV infection by proteolyzing extracellular matrix proteins, thereby increasing viral attachment to heparan sulfate proteoglycans and inducing cell migration16. In this study, we characterized the A. aegypti salivary proteins by mass spectrometry and identified AaVA-1, a female Aedes mosquito saliva-specific protein, as a pro-viral factor for DENV and ZIKV transmission. AaVA-1 promotes flaviviral replication in human monocyte-lineage immune cells, the primary intradermal target of flaviviruses during mosquito biting8,9,11. Inoculation of AaVA-1 with the viruses leads to robust viremia and disease onset, whereas AaVA-1 depletion in infected Aedes mosquitoes results in a lower viral load and prolonged lifespan in the bitten animals. Mechanistic studies indicate that AaVA-1 can gain access into a human immune cell in a RhoA-dependent manner, intracellularly trafficking from endosomes to mitochondria. AaVA-1 sequesters LRPPRC on mitochondria, an autophagy antagonist, thereby activating autophagy to promote DENV and ZIKV replication in human immune cells. Indeed, LRPPRC has been identified as a Beclin-1 suppressor to prevent formation of the Beclin-1-PI3KCIII autophagy initiator40,41,42. AaVA-1 offsets LRPPRC-mediated inhibition of Beclin-1, thereby enabling the downstream autophagy activation.
Previous studies have shown that LRPPRC posttranscriptionally regulates mitochondrial mRNAs inside mitochondria44,51. Nonetheless, abundant evidence indicates that LRPPRC can interact with cytosolic proteins. For example, HCV NS5A localizes to the endoplasmic reticulum during viral infection, while the NS5A binds to LRPPRC on mitochondria to inhibit the MAVS-regulated antiviral signaling during HCV infection52. LRPPRC plays a direct role in eIF4E-dependent mRNA export by directly interacting with eIF4E, which localizes to both nucleus and cytoplasma53. Intriguingly, the LRPPRC/SLIRP complex has a specific role in mRNA maturation after transcription in mitochondria. LRPPRC may shuttle between a soluble matrix fraction and an inner membrane fraction that might depend on its association with SLIRP54. We therefore propose that LRPPRC not only localizes inside mitochondria, but also may be present on the surface of mitochondria to interact with cytoplasmic proteins for their functions.
AaVA-1 gains access into a human immune cell by a RhoA-dependent endocytosis and then intracellularly traffics from endosomes to mitochondria. Indeed, some external toxin proteins can be acquired intracellularly by an endocytic route, and then escape from endosome to localize in organelles of cytosol. For example, the purified Tat protein from human immunodeficiency virus 1 can be taken up by cells and subsequently transactivate the viral promoter55,56. An antennapedia homeobox peptide, pAntp, can penetrate into the cells and regulate neural morphogenesis57. Shiga toxin B-fragment can enter cells through both CME and clathrin-independent endocytosis. This protein is directly transported to the Golgi network from early endosome58, and then reach the ER, finally translocating in the cytosol59. Ricin A-chain, another external toxin protein, is also transported to the cytosol60. Thus, we speculate that AaVA-1 might utilize the similar aforementioned strategy.
Autophagy is a cellular process that responds to stress stimuli to maintain cellular homeostasis48. Besides, autophagy plays either pro- or antiviral roles during viral infection. Previous studies indicated the important roles of autophagy in host defense against pathogens and positive regulation of immune responses61. For example, activation of autophagy facilitates innate recognition of viral pathogens and IFN-α production in vesicular stomatitis virus-infected plasmacytoid DCs. The viral recognition by TLR7 requires transportation of cytosolic viral intermediates into lysosome by the process of autophagy62. Autophagy is essential for TLR3-mediated type I interferon production in the Coxsackie virus B3-infected kidney fibroblasts63. Nonetheless, some pathogens have evolved mechanisms to usurp autophagy to facilitate their robust replication in the host. The replication of several viruses in the Picornaviridae family is suppressed by the presence of autophagy inhibitors64,65. In addition, infections by many members of the Flaviviridae family, such as HCV33, DENV22, JEV32 and ZIKV24, are able to activate autophagy to promote the replication of these viruses and the maturation of viral particles.
In our experimental settings, manipulation of AaVA-1 resulted in a small change in viral loads; nonetheless, the AaVA-1-treated animals succumbed to infection 2–3 days earlier than mock-treated animals. Therefore, AaVA-1 might promote viral pathogenesis in animals beyond enhancement of viral replication. Mosquito saliva is able to regulate the host inflammatory immune responses28,30,50. We found that incubation of AaVA-1 in THP-1 cells did not influence the expression of TNF-α, IL-1β, IFN-α2, IFN-α7, IL-8, MCP-1, IFN-β, or MIP-1α. However, we cannot exclude the possibility that AaVA-1 plays a regulatory role in other immune responses. In this study, we showed that AaVA-1 activates autophagic signaling in human immune cells. Indeed, autophagy is incorporated into adaptive immune pathways through the regulation of antigen presentation and lymphocyte homeostasis66. Intriguingly, previous studies found that mosquito bites promoted a Th2 cell-dominated immune response to enhance virus replication67, suggesting that AaVA-1 might play multiple roles in facilitating flavivirus pathogenesis in mammals in addition to enhancing viral replication.
Intriguingly, mosquito-borne flaviviruses are specifically carried and transmitted by different mosquito species. The Aedes mosquitoes show higher vector competence for DENV and ZIKV transmission, while some other flaviviruses such as JEV and WNV are predominantly transmitted by the Culex mosquitoes in nature68. The salivary components of the two mosquitoes also differ substantially. For example, a previous study has indicated that the SGE from the mosquitoes of A. aegypti and Culex quinquefasciatus differentially modulate host immune responses69. C. quinquefasciatus saliva exerts an inhibitory effect on platelet-activating factor (PAF) and has salivary PAF-specific phospholipase C activity, whereas A. aegypti SGE does not show any similar activities70. We found that AaVA-1 acts as positive regulators of autophagy, thereby promoting DENV and ZIKV replication in host cells. Indeed, a homologue of AaVA-1 was identified from C. quinquefasciatus by sequence comparison (43% amino acid identity to AaVA-1). Contribution of Culex VA-1 in JEV and WNV transmission by inducing autophagy remains to be further understood.
Mosquito saliva may promote viral transmission in multiple ways, such as modulating host inflammatory responses, suppressing IFN signaling and promoting viral attachment. In this study, we discovered a role of mosquito saliva-mediated autophagy activation in facilitating flaviviral transmission. This study may provide insights into the molecular basis of flaviviral survival in their lifecycle and the results could offer therapeutic targets for the prevention of flavivirus dissemination in nature.
Methods
Ethics statement
Human blood was collected from healthy donors who provided written informed consent. The collection of human blood samples was approved by the local ethics committee at Tsinghua University.
Mice, mosquitoes, cells, and viruses
AG6 mice were donated by the Institute Pasteur of Shanghai, Chinese Academy of Sciences. Beclin-1+/– mice (Cat# 018429) were purchased from the Jackson Laboratory. The mice were bred and maintained under a specific pathogen-free animal facility at Tsinghua University. Groups of age- and sex-matched mice, 8–10 weeks of age, were used for the animal studies. All animal protocols used in this study were approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee of Tsinghua University and performed in accordance with their guidelines. The laboratory animal facility has been accredited by AAALAC (Association for Assessment and Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care International). A. aegypti (the Rockefeller strain) and A. albopictus (the Jiangsu strain) were reared in a low-temperature, illuminated incubator (Model 818, Thermo Electron Corporation) at 28 °C and 80% humidity, according to standard rearing procedures29. ZIKV (GZ01 strain, KU820898) and DENV-2 (New Guinea C strain, AF038403.1) were used in the experiments. The viruses were passaged in A. albopictus C6/36 cells. The virus titers were determined by a plaque formation assay. The Drosophila melanogaster S2 cell line was cultured in Schneider’s medium with 10% heat-inactivated fetal bovine serum (Cat# 16000-044, Gibco) and 1% antibiotic-antimycotic (Cat# 15240-062, Invitrogen). The Vero cells and 293T cells were maintained in Dulbecco’s modified Eagle’s medium (Cat# 11965-092, Gibco) supplemented with 10% heat-inactivated fetal bovine serum. The THP-1 cells were maintained in Roswell Park Memorial Institute (RPMI) 1640 medium (Cat# 22400089, Gibco) supplemented with 10% heat-inactivated fetal bovine serum. The Vero, 293T, C6/36 and THP-1 cell lines were purchased from the ATCC (Cat# CCL81, CRL-3216, CRL-1660 and TIB-202). The Drosophila S2 cell line (Cat# R690-07) and FreeStyle-293F Cells (Cat# R790-07) were provided by Invitrogen.
Western blotting analysis and antibodies
The AaVA-1 gene was amplified from the complementary DNA of mosquitos and cloned into a pET-28a (+) expression vector (Cat# 69864, Millipore). The cloning primers are presented in Supplementary Table 4. Recombinant AaVA-1 protein was expressed in the Escherichia coli BL21 DE3 strain in an insoluble form in inclusion bodies. The protein was then solubilized in 8M urea and purified with a TALON Purification Kit (Cat# 635515, Clontech). Mouse antiserum was produced via inoculation with recombinant AaVA-1 with three boosts, and the serum was divided and stored at −80 °C until further use. The samples were separated by 12% SDS–PAGE gel, followed by electrophoretic transfer to polyvinylidene fluoride membranes, and blocking and incubating membranes with primary antibodies. The following antibodies were used in these experiment: anti-LC3B (Cat# 2775, 1:1000 dilution), anti-FIP200 (Cat# 12436, 1:1000 dilution), and anti-GAPDH (Cat# 2118, 1:3000 dilution) antibodies were obtained from Cell Signaling Technology (CST). Anti-Beclin-1 (Cat# 66665-1-Ig, 1:2000 dilution), anti-RhoA (Cat# 10749-1-AP, 1:1000 dilution), anti-Rubicon (Cat# 21444-1-AP, 1:1000 dilution), anti-Actin (Cat# 60008-1-Ig, 1:2000 dilution), and anti-LRPPRC (Cat# 21175-1-AP, 1:1000 dilution) antibodies were obtained from the Proteintech Group. Anti-V5 (Cat# M167-3, 1:1000 dilution) and anti-Myc (Cat# 562, 1:1000 dilution) antibodies were purchased from Medical & Biological Lab (MBL). Anti-AaVA-1 (mouse serum) was used at 1:1000 dilution. Anti-V5-HRP (Cat# R961-25, dilution 1:5000) and anti-Myc-HRP (Cat# R951-25, 1:5000 dilution) antibodies were purchased from Invitrogen. Uncropped scans of blots have been provided in the Supplementary Information.
Expression and purification of recombinant protein
The genes encoding A. aegypti salivary protein were cloned without signal sequences into a pMT/BiP/V5-His A vector (Cat# V4130-20, Invitrogen) for expression in Drosophila S2 cells. For immunoprecipitation assays, the human LRPPRC gene, LRPPRC truncations, PTCD1 gene, and Beclin-1 gene were cloned into a pcDNA3.1/Myc-His C vector for expression in 293T cells. LRPPRC and LRPPRC-T3 were purified from 293F cells using a Cobalt-His column. Beclin-1 was cloned into a pGEX-6P-2 vector and purified from E. coli using glutathione sepharose. The cloning primers are shown in Supplementary Table 4. For AaVA-1 expression, the stable S2 cells were cultured in S2 Schneider’s medium in a 175 cm2 flask and then transferred into spinner flasks containing Express Five serum-free medium (Cat# 10486-025, Gibco) for protein expression. The cells were further cultured for 3 days and induced with 500 μM copper sulfate for another 4 days. The supernatant was centrifuged, filtrated, and then concentrated for AaVA-1 purification by a TALON Purification Kit (Cat# 635515, Clontech).
Gene silencing and viral infection in mosquitoes
For silencing the target genes, female Aedes mosquitoes were maintained on ice for 15 min, and then transferred to a cold tray (Cat# 1431, BioQuip) to receive a thoracic injection of dsRNA into the hemocoele. In addition, 1 μg/300 nl of dsRNA was microinjected into mosquito thoraxes. Subsequently, the injected mosquitoes were allowed to recover under standard rearing conditions for further investigation. A. aegypti salivary glands were dissected and the SGE was generated from the gene-silenced A. aegypti. The gene silencing efficiency was assessed by quantitative reverse transcriptase PCR (qRT-PCR) and western blotting analysis. The primers used for gene detection are shown in Supplementary Table 4. For viral infection in mosquitoes, 1000 M.I.D.50 (50% mosquito infectious dose) of ZIKV was microinjected into the mosquito thoraxes. The infected mosquitoes were subjected to biting the AG6 mice for further investigation.
qPCR detection
Total RNA was isolated from homogenized mosquitoes using an RNeasy Mini Kit (Cat# 74106, Qiagen) and reverse-transcribed into cDNA using an iScript cDNA synthesis kit (Cat# 170-8890, Bio-Rad). qRT-PCR was performed on the Bio-Rad CFX-96 Touch Real-Time Detection System. Primer sequences are shown in Supplementary Table 4.
Determination of the virus in infected mice
Blood samples were collected from the tail veins of infected mice in 0.4% sodium citrate and centrifuged for 5 min at 6,000 × g and 4 °C to isolate plasma. The presence of infectious viral particles in the plasma was determined using a plaque assay29.
Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
The purified proteins were used in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) assay. The prey protein (2 μg) was coated overnight at 4 °C. The plates were blocked using 5% w/v bovine serum albumin (BSA) solution for 1 h at room temperature. The bait proteins were added and incubated for 2 h. After washing, the primary antibody was added and incubated for an additional 2 h. After washing again, a secondary IgG-HRP was added to each well, and the plates were incubated for 1 h. The commercial peroxidase substrate system was used for signaling detection (Cat# 5120-0053, SeraCare), and the optical density at 450 nm was measured with an ELISA reader.
Co-immunoprecipitation
The recombinant plasmids were transiently transfected into 293T cells with a Lipofectamine 2000 transfection reagent (Cat# 11668019, Invitrogen). After 48 h of transfection, co-IP was performed by a Pierce Classic IP Kit (Cat# 26146, Thermo Scientific). The cells were incubated on ice with the IP lysis buffer containing a protease inhibitor cocktail (Cat# 4693132001, Roche). The cell lysates was incubated with 1 μg of purified AaVA-1 at 4 °C, subsequently the mixture was incubated with 2 μg of antibody overnight. The Protein A/G Agarose was added for 2 h incubation. After washing with the IP lysis buffer, the samples were detected by western blotting.
Immunofluorescence staining and microscopy
For the AaVA-1 entry and binding assays, purified AaVA-1 (5 μg/ml) was incubated with human immune cells. The cells were washed three times in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) and fixed with ice-cold methanol (−20 °C) or 4% paraformaldehyde for 15 min following the antibody instructions. The cells were then permeabilized with 0.3% Triton X-100 for 20 min, washed with PBS, and blocked in 2% BSA for 1 h. The cells were stained with anti-V5 (Cat# M167-3, MBL), anti-LRPPRC (Cat# 21175-1-AP, Proteintech), anti-Beclin-1 (Cat# 66665-1-Ig, Proteintech), anti-Cdc42 (Cat# ab64533, Abcam), anti-RhoA (Cat# 10749-1-AP, Proteintech), anti-Clathrin (Cat# 4796, CST), anti-Caveolin-1 (Cat# 3267, CST), anti-Flotillin-1 (Cat# 18634, CST), anti-Arf6 (Cat# PA1-093, Invitrogen), anti-Rab5 (Cat# 2143, CST), anti-Rab7 (Cat# 9367, CST), anti-Lamp1 (Cat# 9091, CST), anti-GM130 (Cat# 12480, CST), anti-Tom20 (Cat# 42406, CST), anti-Calnexin (Cat# 2679, CST), anti-dsRNA J2 (Cat# 10010200, SCICONS), anti-AaVA-1 (mouse serum), anti-flavivirus E protein (4G2), and anti-LC3B (Cat# 2775, CST) as 1:200 dilution at 4 °C overnight, according to different experimental settings. The cells were washed and then stained with fluorescence-conjugated secondary antibodies for 1 h at room temperature. The nuclei were stained blue with DAPI (Cat# 10236276001, Roche). For staining LRPPRC, AaVA-1 and Beclin-1 on mitochondria, biotin-labeled AaVA-1 (5 μg/ml), anti-LRPPRC (Cat# sc166178, Santa Cruz, 1:200 dilution), or anti-Beclin-1 (Cat# AF5295, R&D Systems, 1:200 dilution) were used for the experiments. Images were examined using a Zeiss LSM 780 meta confocal microscope.
siRNA transfection
Both siRNA oligos against Beclin-1, RhoA, FIP200, and Rubicon genes and the negative siRNA were ordered from Shanghai GenePharma. siRNA sequences are listed in Supplementary Table 4. siRNA oligos were transfected into THP-1 cells using Cell Line Nucleofector Kit V (Cat# VCA-1003, Lonza) following the manufacturer’s instructions.
Human moDC and moMØ generation
Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) were isolated by Ficoll-Paque density gradient centrifugation (Cat# 17144002, GE Healthcare) from healthy donor blood. Human moDC and moMØ were generated from PBMCs by adherence to plastic for 2 h at 37 °C in 5% CO2. For moDC generation, monocytes were cultured in RPMI 1640 medium supplemented with 10% heat-inactivated fetal bovine serum, 100 ng/ml granulocyte–macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) (Cat# 34-8339-82, eBioscience) and 100 ng/ml IL-4 (Cat# 34-8049-82, eBioscience) for 7 days. For macrophage generation, monocytes were cultured in RPMI 1640 medium supplemented with 10% heat-inactivated fetal bovine serum and 100 ng/ml GM-CSF for 7 days.
Quantification and statistical analysis
Animals were randomly allocated into different groups. Mosquitoes that died before measurement were excluded from the analysis. The investigators were not blinded to the allocation during the experiments or to the outcome assessment. Descriptive statistics have been provided in the figure legends. Given the nature of the experiments and the type of samples, differences in continuous variables were assessed with the nonparametric Mann–Whitney test. The survival rates of the infected mice were statistically analysed using the log-rank (Mantel–Cox) test. All analyses were performed using the GraphPad Prism statistical software.
Reporting summary
Further information on research design is available in the Nature Research Reporting Summary linked to this article.
Data availability
All data generated or analyzed during this study are included in this published article and its Supplementary Information files. The source data underlying Figs. 1c–f, 2b–g, 3b, c, e, g–i, 4a–f, 5b, c, f, h, 6a–f, h, i, and Supplementary Figs. 1B-E, 2, 3, 5, 6C-E, 6G-I, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12G, 13B, 14C,15B, D and E-H are provided as a Source Data file. Uncropped scans of blots/gels of Figs. 1a, b, 2a, 3f, 4a, 5e, g, 6a, b, and Supplementary Fig. 4, 6B, 6F, 11B, 12A, C, E, F, 13C, D, 14A, B, 15A, C, and 17B-C have been provided in Supplementary Figs. 18–20.
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Acknowledgements
We thank Professor Liang Ge from Tsinghua University School of Life Sciences to provide suggestions for the autophagy studies. We thank Professor Qiyong Liu from China CDC to donate the A. albopictus Jiangsu strain. This work was funded by the grants from the National Key Research and Development Plan of China (2019YFC1200201, 2018YFA0507202, 2018ZX09711003-004-003, 2016ZX10004001-008, 2016YFC1201000, and 2016YFD0500400), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (81730063, 31825001, and 815719754), and Shenzhen San-Ming Project for prevention and research on vector-borne diseases (SZSM201611064). We thank the core facilities of the Center for Life Sciences and Center of Biomedical Analysis for technical assistance (Tsinghua University).
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G.C. designed the experiments and wrote the manuscript. P.S. and K.X.N. performed the majority of the experiments and analyzed the data. Y.B.Z., Y.L., P.W., Z.W.L., S.Y.D. and H.H.F. facilitated the experiment of mosquito infection. C.H.C., R.I.Z. and P.H.W. contributed to experimental suggestions and strengthened the writing of the manuscript. All authors reviewed, critiqued, and provided comments on the text.
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Sun, P., Nie, K., Zhu, Y. et al. A mosquito salivary protein promotes flavivirus transmission by activation of autophagy. Nat Commun 11, 260 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-14115-z
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-14115-z
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