Abstract

Sandfly-transmitted phleboviruses (family Phenuiviridae, order Bunyavirales) are associated with febrile illness and infections of the nervous system in humans. These viruses are almost exclusively found in tropical areas of the New World and restricted to semiarid and temperate zones in the Old World. Here, we discovered seven strains of four previously unknown phleboviruses, named Bogoria virus (BOGV), Embossos virus (EMRV), Kiborgoch virus (KBGV), and Perkerra virus (PERV), as well as the recently discovered Ntepes virus, in sandflies collected in the Kenyan Rift Valley. The genomes have a tripartite organization with conserved termini typical of phleboviruses. LOBV, PERV, and EMBV showed low similarity to known phleboviruses, with less than 55% pairwise amino acid identities in the RNA-directed RNA polymerase (RdRp) proteins, and defined a highly diversified monophyletic clade in sister relationship to the sandfly fever Sicilian serocomplex. All three viruses failed to react with sandfly fever Sicilian virus antisera in recombinant immunofluorescence assays (rIFA), suggesting that the viruses belong to a yet-unknown serogroup. In contrast, KBGV was closely related to Toscana virus (84% identity of RdRp proteins) and shared a most recent common ancestor with the clade comprising sandfly fever Naples and Toscana viruses. KBGV reacted with sandfly fever Naples and Toscana virus antisera in rIFA. The genetic diversity of the detected viruses and their phylogenetic positions implies that the Old World sandfly-borne phleboviruses originated from sub-Saharan Africa. Importantly, our findings suggest that diseases associated with sandfly-borne phlebovirus infections may also affect the Kenyan population.IMPORTANCE Studies on the genetic diversity of arthropod-borne viruses circulating in rural regions can provide critical early indications on new emerging viruses essential for global epidemic preparedness. In this study, we describe the discovery of four phleboviruses in sandflies from the Kenyan Rift Valley. The novel viruses are related to the two medically important serocomplexes, sandfly fever Naples and sandfly fever Sicilian, that are associated with febrile illness and neuroinvasive infections and which were previously not known to occur in sub-Saharan Africa. Knowledge on the occurrence of sandfly-borne phleboviruses in Kenya and elsewhere in Africa can help to decipher their contributions in the etiologies of fevers of unknown origin in patients. Our findings on five genetically diverse phleboviruses detected in Kenya suggest that the common ancestor of Old World phleboviruses existed in sub-Saharan Africa, a hot spot for emerging arboviruses.

Highlights

  • Sandfly-transmitted phleboviruses are associated with febrile illness and infections of the nervous system in humans

  • The newly detected viruses were named after geographic references in the area of Baringo County where the phlebovirus-positive sandfly specimens were collected: Bogoria virus (BGRV), named after Lake Bogoria; Embossos virus (EMBV), named after the Embossos River; Perkerra virus (PERV), named after the Perkerra River; and Kiborgoch virus (KBGV), named after the Kiborgoch Community Wildlife and Wetlands Conservancy south of Marigat subcounty

  • BGRV, EMBV, PERV, and KBGV were exclusively detected in sandflies collected in one of the two sampling locations, in the village Kapkuikui (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Sandfly-transmitted phleboviruses (family Phenuiviridae, order Bunyavirales) are associated with febrile illness and infections of the nervous system in humans. Sandfly-borne phleboviruses (family Phenuiviridae, order Bunyavirales) of the Old World have mainly been reported in the Mediterranean area, in North Africa, and in Western and Central Asia (reviewed in reference 1). These viruses are exclusively transmitted by sandflies of the genera Phlebotomus and Sergentomyia in the Old World and by species of the genus Lutzomyia in the New World. Symptoms of sandfly fever Naples virus and sandfly fever Sicilian virus infections are clinically similar and often described as 3-day-fever characterized by abrupt onset of fever, headache, muscular pain, photophobia, and nausea [1] Both viruses are endemic in the Mediterranean region and western and central Asia [2]. Recent studies have found antibodies against Adana virus belonging to this complex in humans, goats, msphere.asm.org 2

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