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Kevin Maringer: Role of mosquito NF-κB-mediated innate immunity in control of virus transmission

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ProImmune thinkpeptides

Full title: The role of mosquito NFκBmediated innate immunity in controlling vectorborne virus transmission and emergence

Despite their evolutionary divergence, insects share many (but not all) immune responses with humans and other vertebrates. Many major breakthroughs in the field of immunology were first made or built upon in insects, particularly the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster. There is a renewed and growing interest in expanding our understanding of insect immunology beyond model organisms to economically important livestock (e.g. honeybees, silkworms) and pests (e.g. aphids), disease vectors of public health and veterinary importance (e.g. mosquitoes), and species exploited as biotechnology platforms (e.g. mothderived protein expression systems). This talk will explore the role of NFκBmediated innate immunity in controlling the replication and transmission of vectorborne viruses by the invasive globally distributed tropical mosquito species Aedes aegypti. We were the first to gene edit mosquito cells using the CRISPRCas9 system, and developed novel ankyrons to validate our gene knockouts of NFκB family transcription factors. Using these new tools, we have shown that NFκBdependent immune signalling poses an important barrier to vectorborne virus replication and species jumping. These findings pave the way for developing novel genetically modified mosquitoes refractory to vectorborne disease transmission to reduce the global public health burden of these increasingly important diseases.

Kevin Maringer is a molecular virologist and immunologist interested in how virushost interactions in mosquito vectors drive arbovirus transmission and emergence. Their work focusses on the flavivirus dengue virus (the most prevalent mosquitoborne virus affecting humans) and its primary mosquito vector Aedes aegypti. Kevin completed their PhD in the lab of Professor Gill Elliott at Imperial College London, where they studied herpes simplex virus particle assembly. After graduating from their PhD in 2011, Kevin secured a Sir Henry Wellcome Postdoctoral Fellowship from the Wellcome Trust to develop their dengue virus research programme in the labs of Professor Ana FernandezSesma (Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York) and Dr Andrew Davidson (University of Bristol). Kevin established their own research group at the University of Surrey in 2016 and joined The Pirbright Institute as a group leader in 2020.

posted by ensagisj8