Abstract

Mayaro virus (MAYV), Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (VEEV), and chikungunya virus (CHIKV) are vector-borne alphaviruses that cocirculate in South America. Human infections by these viruses are frequently underdiagnosed or misdiagnosed, especially in areas with high dengue virus endemicity. Disease may progress to debilitating arthralgia (MAYV, CHIKV), encephalitis (VEEV), and death. Few standardized serological assays exist for specific human alphavirus infection detection, and antigen cross-reactivity can be problematic. Therefore, serological platforms that aid in the specific detection of multiple alphavirus infections will greatly expand disease surveillance for these emerging infections. In this study, serum samples from South American patients with PCR- and/or isolation-confirmed infections caused by MAYV, VEEV, and CHIKV were examined by using a protein microarray assembled with recombinant capsid, envelope protein 1 (E1), and E2 from nine New and Old World alphaviruses. Notably, specific antibody recognition of E1 was observed only with MAYV infections, whereas E2 was specifically targeted by antibodies from all of the alphavirus infections investigated, with evidence of cross-reactivity to E2 of o'nyong-nyong virus only in CHIKV-infected patient serum samples. Our findings suggest that alphavirus structural protein microarrays can distinguish infections caused by MAYV, VEEV, and CHIKV and that this multiplexed serological platform could be useful for high-throughput disease surveillance. IMPORTANCE Mayaro, chikungunya, and Venezuelan equine encephalitis viruses are closely related alphaviruses that are spread by mosquitos, causing diseases that produce similar influenza-like symptoms or more severe illnesses. Moreover, alphavirus infection symptoms can be similar to those of dengue or Zika disease, leading to underreporting of cases and potential misdiagnoses. New methods that can be used to detect antibody responses to multiple alphaviruses within the same assay would greatly aid disease surveillance efforts. However, possible antibody cross-reactivity between viruses can reduce the quality of laboratory results. Our results demonstrate that antibody responses to multiple alphaviruses can be specifically quantified within the same assay by using selected recombinant protein antigens and further show that Mayaro virus infections result in unique responses to viral envelope proteins.

Highlights

  • IMPORTANCE Mayaro, chikungunya, and Venezuelan equine encephalitis viruses are closely related alphaviruses that are spread by mosquitos, causing diseases that produce similar influenza-like symptoms or more severe illnesses

  • To examine antibody responses to infection, we assembled a microarray with recombinant C, envelope protein 1 (E1), and E2 antigens from four alphaviruses that cocirculate in South America (MAYV, Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (VEEV), chikungunya virus (CHIKV), and western equine encephalitis virus (WEEV)) and from eastern equine encephalitis virus (EEEV), Ross River virus (RRV), and o’nyong-nyong virus (ONNV), which are geographically limited to North America and the Caribbean, Oceania, and Africa, respectively [7, 8, 20]

  • This report describes an analysis of serological immune responses to human Mayaro virus (MAYV), VEEV, and CHIKV infections that occurred in Peru, Colombia, and Venezuela from 2011 to 2014

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Summary

Introduction

IMPORTANCE Mayaro, chikungunya, and Venezuelan equine encephalitis viruses are closely related alphaviruses that are spread by mosquitos, causing diseases that produce similar influenza-like symptoms or more severe illnesses. In addition to CHIKV, the current alphavirus disease burden in South America includes a diverse range of medically important species that are limited in geographic distribution to the New World These viruses include the zoonotic Mayaro virus (MAYV), another member of the Semliki Forest virus complex, as well as species of the Venezuelan equine encephalitis, eastern equine encephalitis, and western equine encephalitis serocomplexes [7]. To examine antibody responses to infection, we assembled a microarray with recombinant C, E1, and E2 antigens from four alphaviruses that cocirculate in South America (MAYV, VEEV, CHIKV, and WEEV) and from eastern equine encephalitis virus (EEEV), Ross River virus (RRV), and o’nyong-nyong virus (ONNV), which are geographically limited to North America and the Caribbean, Oceania, and Africa, respectively [7, 8, 20]. Our study focused on MAYV, VEEV, and CHIKV infections that recently occurred in South America to explore the utility of this multiplexed platform for high-throughput disease surveillance

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