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Phenotypic characterization of historical and contemporary Oropouche virus strains reveals divergent replication dynamics in multiple cell lines

  • Karine Lima Lourenço
  • , Guilherme Rodrigues Fernandes Campos
  • , Tayna Manfrin Galvão
  • , Lívia Sacchetto
  • , Júlia Guimarães Dias Rubiato
  • , Ana Carolina Parra Sanches
  • , Nikos Vasilakis
  • , Mauricio Lacerda Nogueira

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Oropouche virus (OROV), a significant public health threat in Latin America, has recently expanded beyond its endemic region by the emergence of a recombinant lineage. This study aimed to characterize the replication dynamics of a historical (BeAn19991) and two contemporary (AM0088, OROV43) OROV isolates in mammalian and mosquito cell lines. Using multi- and one-step growth curves, plaque assays, and strand-specific qPCR, we demonstrated that contemporary isolates exhibit distinct phenotypic profiles. While the prototype BeAn19991 displayed robust, sustained replication yielding high infectious titers, contemporary isolates showed faster kinetics with earlier peak production followed by a decline. A significant finding was a major asynchrony between genomic RNA synthesis and the production of infectious particles for isolates AM0088 and OROV43. Strand-specific qPCR revealed excessively high levels of viral RNA relative to much lower infectious titers, particularly in mosquito cells, suggesting the generation of defective interfering particles. These results indicate that contemporary OROV isolates have evolved a replication strategy characterized by rapid initial growth and potentially enhanced transmission. This phenotypic shift likely contributes to the virus' increasing incidence and geographical spread, underscoring the need for continued surveillance and research into its evolution.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number110921
JournalVirology
Volume621
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2026

Keywords

  • Arbovirus
  • Oropouche virus (OROV)
  • Viral replication

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Virology

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