Zika virus
Baltimore Classification and Taxonomy
Group IV: (+) sense single-stranded RNA virus
| Order = Unassigned
| Family = Flaviviridae
| Genus = Flavivirus
| species = Zika virus
{|NCBI: Taxonomy Genome: Genome|}
Description and Significance
Zika virus (ZIKV) is a flavivirus that is closely related to dengue, yellow fever, West Nile, and Japanese encephalitis viruses. (ref)
Genome Structure
Virion Structure of a Zika virus
Reproductive Cycle of a Zika virus in a Host Cell
Viral Ecology
Viral Pathology
Transmission
Mosquito-borne
Human to Human
After returning from a research mission to Senegal, Dr. Brian Foy of the University of Colorado appeared to have passed ZIKV to his wife after sexual intercourse in 2008. Both Dr. Foy and his Ph.D. student Kevin Kobylinski were bitten by numerous mosquitoes while abroad and became ill about 5 days after returning to the U.S. Both showed signs of Zika fever and Dr. Foy's wife saw what she believed to be blood in his semen. Approximately 10 days later, Foy's wife showed signs of Zika fever while their four children remained healthy. At first it was believed that Foy had contracted dengue fever, but after Kobylinski had an encounter with medical entomologist Andrew Haddow who had experience with ZIKV, tests were run that confirmed all three patients possessed antibody for ZIKV. Circumstantial evidence suggests that sexual contact was the mode of transmission due to the high unlikeliness that Foy's wife was bitten by the tropical Aedes mosquito in Colorado. Additionally, the virus requires a 2-week life cycle in mosquito hosts before infecting humans and Foy's wife showed symptoms merely 10 days upon his return. [1]
Zika Fever
Diagnosis
Treatment and Prevention
References
1 Enserink, M. (2011) Sex After A Field Trip Yields Scientific First. Science Magazine