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Dive into the research topics where Andres Velasco-Villa is active.

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Featured researches published by Andres Velasco-Villa.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2012

Evaluation of a direct, rapid immunohistochemical test for rabies diagnosis.

Tiziana Lembo; Michael Niezgoda; Andres Velasco-Villa; Sarah Cleaveland; Eblate Ernest; Charles E. Rupprecht

A direct rapid immunohistochemical test (dRIT) was evaluated under field and laboratory conditions to detect rabies virus antigen in frozen and glycerol-preserved field brain samples from northwestern Tanzania. Compared to the direct fluorescent antibody test, the traditional standard in rabies diagnosis, the dRIT was 100% sensitive and specific.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2008

Enzootic rabies elimination from dogs and reemergence in wild terrestrial carnivores, United States.

Andres Velasco-Villa; Serena A. Reeder; Lillian A. Orciari; Pamela A. Yager; Richard Franka; Jesse D. Blanton; Letha Zuckero; Patrick R. Hunt; Ernest H. Oertli; Laura E. Robinson; Charles E. Rupprecht

Independent enzootics in wild terrestrial carnivores resulted from spillover events from long-term enzootics associated with dogs.


PLOS Pathogens | 2012

Molecular Inferences Suggest Multiple Host Shifts of Rabies Viruses from Bats to Mesocarnivores in Arizona during 2001–2009

Ivan V. Kuzmin; Mang Shi; Lillian A. Orciari; Pamela A. Yager; Andres Velasco-Villa; Natalia Kuzmina; Daniel G. Streicker; David L. Bergman; Charles E. Rupprecht

In nature, rabies virus (RABV; genus Lyssavirus, family Rhabdoviridae) represents an assemblage of phylogenetic lineages, associated with specific mammalian host species. Although it is generally accepted that RABV evolved originally in bats and further shifted to carnivores, mechanisms of such host shifts are poorly understood, and examples are rarely present in surveillance data. Outbreaks in carnivores caused by a RABV variant, associated with big brown bats, occurred repeatedly during 2001–2009 in the Flagstaff area of Arizona. After each outbreak, extensive control campaigns were undertaken, with no reports of further rabies cases in carnivores for the next several years. However, questions remained whether all outbreaks were caused by a single introduction and further perpetuation of bat RABV in carnivore populations, or each outbreak was caused by an independent introduction of a bat virus. Another question of concern was related to adaptive changes in the RABV genome associated with host shifts. To address these questions, we sequenced and analyzed 66 complete and 20 nearly complete RABV genomes, including those from the Flagstaff area and other similar outbreaks in carnivores, caused by bat RABVs, and representatives of the major RABV lineages circulating in North America and worldwide. Phylogenetic analysis demonstrated that each Flagstaff outbreak was caused by an independent introduction of bat RABV into populations of carnivores. Positive selection analysis confirmed the absence of post-shift changes in RABV genes. In contrast, convergent evolution analysis demonstrated several amino acids in the N, P, G and L proteins, which might be significant for pre-adaptation of bat viruses to cause effective infection in carnivores. The substitution S/T242 in the viral glycoprotein is of particular merit, as a similar substitution was suggested for pathogenicity of Nishigahara RABV strain. Roles of the amino acid changes, detected in our study, require additional investigations, using reverse genetics and other approaches.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2006

Molecular Diversity of Rabies Viruses Associated with Bats in Mexico and Other Countries of the Americas

Andres Velasco-Villa; Lillian A. Orciari; Víctor Juárez-Islas; Mauricio Gómez-Sierra; Irma Padilla-Medina; Ana Flisser; Valeria Souza; Amanda Castillo; Richard Franka; Maribel Escalante-Mañe; Isaias Sauri-González; Charles E. Rupprecht

ABSTRACT Bat rabies and its transmission to humans and other species in Mexico were investigated. Eighty-nine samples obtained from rabid livestock, cats, dogs, and humans in Mexico were studied by antigenic typing and partial sequence analysis. Samples were further compared with enzootic rabies associated with different species of bats in the Americas. Patterns of nucleotide variation allowed the definition of at least 20 monophyletic clusters associated with 9 or more different bat species. Several lineages associated with distinctive antigenic patterns were found in rabies viruses related to rabies in vampire bats in Mexico. Vampire bat rabies virus lineages associated with antigenic variant 3 are widely spread from Mexico to South America, suggesting these lineages as the most likely ancestors of vampire bat rabies and the ones that have been moved by vampire bat populations throughout the Americas. Rabies viruses related to Lasiurus cinereus, Histiotus montanus, and some other not yet identified species of the genus Lasiurus were found circulating in Mexico. Long-range dissemination patterns of rabies are not necessarily associated with migratory bat species, as in the case of rabies in Desmodus rotundus and Histiotus montanus. Human rabies was associated with vampire bat transmission in most cases, and in one case, rabies transmission from free-tailed bats was inferred. The occurrence of rabies spillover from bats to domestic animals was also demonstrated. Genetic typing of rabies viruses allowed us to distinguish trends of disease dissemination and to address, in a preliminary fashion, aspects of the complex evolution of rabies viruses in different host-reservoir species.


JAMA | 2013

Raccoon Rabies Virus Variant Transmission Through Solid Organ Transplantation

Neil M. Vora; Sridhar V. Basavaraju; Katherine A. Feldman; Christopher D. Paddock; Lillian A. Orciari; Steven Gitterman; Stephanie Griese; Ryan M. Wallace; Maria A. Said; Dianna M. Blau; Gennaro Selvaggi; Andres Velasco-Villa; Jana M. Ritter; Pamela A. Yager; Agnes Kresch; Mike Niezgoda; Jesse D. Blanton; Valentina Stosor; Edward M. Falta; G. Marshall Lyon; Teresa R. Zembower; Natalia Kuzmina; Prashant K. Rohatgi; Sergio Recuenco; Sherif R. Zaki; Inger K. Damon; Richard Franka; Matthew J. Kuehnert

IMPORTANCE The rabies virus causes a fatal encephalitis and can be transmitted through tissue or organ transplantation. In February 2013, a kidney recipient with no reported exposures to potentially rabid animals died from rabies 18 months after transplantation. OBJECTIVES To investigate whether organ transplantation was the source of rabies virus exposure in the kidney recipient, and to evaluate for and prevent rabies in other transplant recipients from the same donor. DESIGN Organ donor and all transplant recipient medical records were reviewed. Laboratory tests to detect rabies virus-specific binding antibodies, rabies virus neutralizing antibodies, and rabies virus antigens were conducted on available specimens, including serum, cerebrospinal fluid, and tissues from the donor and the recipients. Viral ribonucleic acid was extracted from tissues and amplified for nucleoprotein gene sequencing for phylogenetic comparisons. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Determination of whether the donor died from undiagnosed rabies and whether other organ recipients developed rabies. RESULTS In retrospect, the donors clinical presentation (which began with vomiting and upper extremity paresthesias and progressed to fever, seizures, dysphagia, autonomic dysfunction, and brain death) was consistent with rabies. Rabies virus antigen was detected in archived autopsy brain tissue collected from the donor. The rabies viruses infecting the donor and the deceased kidney recipient were consistent with the raccoon rabies virus variant and were more than 99.9% identical across the entire N gene (1349/1350 nucleotides), thus confirming organ transplantation as the route of transmission. The 3 other organ recipients remained asymptomatic, with rabies virus neutralizing antibodies detected in their serum after completion of postexposure prophylaxis (range, 0.3-40.8 IU/mL). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Unlike the 2 previous clusters of rabies virus transmission through solid organ transplantation, there was a long incubation period in the recipient who developed rabies, and survival of 3 other recipients without pretransplant rabies vaccination. Rabies should be considered in patients with acute progressive encephalitis of unexplained etiology, especially for potential organ donors. A standard evaluation of potential donors who meet screening criteria for infectious encephalitis should be considered, and risks and benefits for recipients of organs from these donors should be evaluated.


PLOS Pathogens | 2012

Rates of viral evolution are linked to host geography in bat rabies.

Daniel G. Streicker; Philippe Lemey; Andres Velasco-Villa; Charles E. Rupprecht

Rates of evolution span orders of magnitude among RNA viruses with important implications for viral transmission and emergence. Although the tempo of viral evolution is often ascribed to viral features such as mutation rates and transmission mode, these factors alone cannot explain variation among closely related viruses, where host biology might operate more strongly on viral evolution. Here, we analyzed sequence data from hundreds of rabies viruses collected from bats throughout the Americas to describe dramatic variation in the speed of rabies virus evolution when circulating in ecologically distinct reservoir species. Integration of ecological and genetic data through a comparative Bayesian analysis revealed that viral evolutionary rates were labile following historical jumps between bat species and nearly four times faster in tropical and subtropical bats compared to temperate species. The association between geography and viral evolution could not be explained by host metabolism, phylogeny or variable selection pressures, and instead appeared to be a consequence of reduced seasonality in bat activity and virus transmission associated with climate. Our results demonstrate a key role for host ecology in shaping the tempo of evolution in multi-host viruses and highlight the power of comparative phylogenetic methods to identify the host and environmental features that influence transmission dynamics.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2009

Molecular Epidemiology of Rabies in Southern People’s Republic of China

Xiaoyan Tao; Qing Tang; Hao Li; Zhao-Jun Mo; Hong Zhang; Dingming Wang; Qiang Zhang; Miao Song; Andres Velasco-Villa; Xianfu Wu; Charles E. Rupprecht; Guodong Liang

Migration and transport of dogs may have caused recent epidemics of human rabies.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Variable evolutionary routes to host establishment across repeated rabies virus host shifts among bats

Daniel G. Streicker; Sonia Altizer; Andres Velasco-Villa; Charles E. Rupprecht

Determining the genetic pathways that viruses traverse to establish in new host species is crucial to predict the outcome of cross-species transmission but poorly understood for most host–virus systems. Using sequences encoding 78% of the rabies virus genome, we explored the extent, repeatability and dynamic outcome of evolution associated with multiple host shifts among New World bats. Episodic bursts of positive selection were detected in several viral proteins, including regions associated with host cell interaction and viral replication. Host shifts involved unique sets of substitutions, and few sites exhibited repeated evolution across adaptation to many bat species, suggesting diverse genetic determinants over host range. Combining these results with genetic reconstructions of the demographic histories of individual viral lineages revealed that although rabies viruses shared consistent three-stage processes of emergence in each new bat species, host shifts involving greater numbers of positively selected substitutions had longer delays between cross-species transmission and enzootic viral establishment. Our results point to multiple evolutionary routes to host establishment in a zoonotic RNA virus that may influence the speed of viral emergence.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2007

Molecular epidemiology identifies only a single rabies virus variant circulating in complex carnivore communities of the Serengeti

Tiziana Lembo; Daniel T. Haydon; Andres Velasco-Villa; Charles E. Rupprecht; Craig Packer; P.E Brandão; Ivan V. Kuzmin; Anthony R. Fooks; Jacques Barrat; Sarah Cleaveland

Understanding the transmission dynamics of generalist pathogens that infect multiple host species is essential for their effective control. Only by identifying those host populations that are critical to the permanent maintenance of the pathogen, as opposed to populations in which outbreaks are the result of ‘spillover’ infections, can control measures be appropriately directed. Rabies virus is capable of infecting a wide range of host species, but in many ecosystems, particular variants circulate among only a limited range of potential host populations. The Serengeti ecosystem (in northwestern Tanzania) supports a complex community of wild carnivores that are threatened by generalist pathogens that also circulate in domestic dog populations surrounding the park boundaries. While the combined assemblage of host species appears capable of permanently maintaining rabies in the ecosystem, little is known about the patterns of circulation within and between these host populations. Here we use molecular phylogenetics to test whether distinct virus–host associations occur in this species-rich carnivore community. Our analysis identifies a single major variant belonging to the group of southern Africa canid-associated viruses (Africa 1b) to be circulating within this ecosystem, and no evidence for species-specific grouping. A statistical parsimony analysis of nucleoprotein and glycoprotein gene sequence data is consistent with both within- and between-species transmission events. While likely differential sampling effort between host species precludes a definitive inference, the results are most consistent with dogs comprising the reservoir of rabies and emphasize the importance of applying control efforts in dog populations.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2009

Human Rabies and Rabies in Vampire and Nonvampire Bat Species, Southeastern Peru, 2007

Gabriela Salmón-Mulanovich; Alicia Vásquez; Christian Albujar; Carolina Guevara; V. Alberto Laguna-Torres; Milagros Salazar; Hernán Zamalloa; Marcia Cáceres; Jorge Gómez-Benavides; Víctor Pacheco; Carlos Contreras; Tadeusz J. Kochel; Michael Niezgoda; Felix R. Jackson; Andres Velasco-Villa; Charles E. Rupprecht; Joel M. Montgomery

After a human rabies outbreak in southeastern Peru, we collected bats to estimate the prevalence of rabies in various species. Among 165 bats from 6 genera and 10 species, 10.3% were antibody positive; antibody prevalence was similar in vampire and nonvampire bats. Thus, nonvampire bats may also be a source for human rabies in Peru.

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Lillian A. Orciari

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Richard Franka

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Pamela A. Yager

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Jesse D. Blanton

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Michael Niezgoda

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Inger K. Damon

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Ivan V. Kuzmin

Global Alliance for Rabies Control

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Sergio Recuenco

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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