1206 genomes reveal origin and movement of Aedes aegypti driving increased dengue risk.

Crawford JE., Balcazar D., Redmond S., Rose NH., Youd HA., Lucas ER., Ali RSM., Alnazawi A., Badolo A., Chen C-H., Cosme LV., Henke JA., Hung KY., Kluh S., Liu W-L., Maringer K., Martins A., Micieli MV., Pless E., Sombié A., Surendran SN., Wahid I., Armbruster PA., Weetman D., McBride CS., Gloria-Soria A., Powell JR., White BJ.

The emergence and global expansion of Aedes aegypti puts more than half of all humans at risk of arbovirus infection, but the origin of this mosquito and the impact of contemporary gene flow on arbovirus control are unclear. We sequenced 1206 genomes from 73 globally distributed locations. After evolving a preference for humans in Sahelian West Africa, the invasive subspecies Ae. aegypti aegypti (Aaa) emerged in the Americas after the Atlantic slave trade era and expanded globally. Recent back-to-Africa Aaa migration introduced insecticide resistance and anthropophily into regions with recent dengue outbreaks, raising concern that Aaa movement could increase arbovirus risk in urban Africa. These data underscore developing complexity in the fight against dengue, Zika, and chikungunya and provide a platform to further study this important mosquito vector.

DOI

10.1126/science.ads3732

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2025-09-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

389

Addresses

Verily Life Sciences, South San Francisco, CA, USA.

Keywords

Animals, Humans, Aedes, Dengue, Animal Migration, Disease Outbreaks, Insecticide Resistance, Africa, Western, Genome, Insect, Gene Flow, Introduced Species, Mosquito Vectors

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