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Dive into the research topics where Christian Mathiot is active.

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Featured researches published by Christian Mathiot.


Medical and Veterinary Entomology | 2005

Mosquito vectors of the 1998–1999 outbreak of Rift Valley Fever and other arboviruses (Bagaza, Sanar, Wesselsbron and West Nile) in Mauritania and Senegal

Mawlouth Diallo; P. Nabeth; K. Ba; Amadou A. Sall; Yamar Ba; Mireille Mondo; L. Girault; M. O. Abdalahi; Christian Mathiot

Abstract.  Following an outbreak of Rift Valley fever (RVF) in south‐eastern Mauritania during 1998, entomological investigations were conducted for 2 years in the affected parts of Senegal and Mauritania, spanning the Sénégal River basin. A total of 92 787 mosquitoes (Diptera: Culicidae), belonging to 10 genera and 41 species, were captured in light traps. In Senegal, Culex poicilipes (41%) and Mansonia uniformis (39%) were the most abundant species caught, whereas Aedes vexans (77%) and Cx. poicilipes (15%) predominated in Mauritania. RVF virus was isolated from 63 pools of Cx. poicilipes: 36 from Senegal in 1998 and 27 from Mauritania in 1999. These results are the first field evidence of Cx. poicilipes naturally infected with RVFV, and the first isolations of this virus from mosquitoes in Mauritania – the main West African epidemic and epizootic area. Additional arbovirus isolates comprised 25 strains of Bagaza (BAG) from Aedes fowleri, Culex neavei and Cx. poicilipes; 67 Sanar (ArD 66707) from Cx. poicilipes; 51 Wesselsbron (WSL) from Ae. vexans and 30 strains of West Nile (WN) from Ma. uniformis, showing differential specific virus–vector associations in the circulation activity of these five arboviruses.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2003

Amplification of the Sylvatic Cycle of Dengue Virus Type 2, Senegal, 1999–2000: Entomologic Findings and Epidemiologic Considerations

Mawlouth Diallo; Yamar Ba; Amadou A. Sall; Ousmane M. Diop; Jacques A. Ndione; Mireille Mondo; Lang Girault; Christian Mathiot

After 8 years of silence, dengue virus serotype 2 (DENV-2) reemerged in southeastern Senegal in 1999. Sixty-four DENV-2 strains were isolated in 1999 and 9 strains in 2000 from mosquitoes captured in the forest gallery and surrounding villages. Isolates were obtained from previously described vectors, Aedes furcifer, Ae. taylori, Ae. luteocephalus, and—for the first time in Senegal—from Ae. aegypti and Ae. vittatus. A retrospective analysis of sylvatic DENV-2 outbreaks in Senegal during the last 28 years of entomologic investigations shows that amplifications are periodic, with intervening, silent intervals of 5–8 years. No correlation was found between sylvatic DENV-2 emergence and rainfall amount. For sylvatic DENV-2 vectors, rainfall seems to particularly affect virus amplification that occurs at the end of the rainy season, from October to November. Data obtained from investigation of preimaginal (i.e., nonadult) mosquitoes suggest a secondary transmission cycle involving mosquitoes other than those identified previously as vectors.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2004

Dengue Emergence and Adaptation to Peridomestic Mosquitoes

Abelardo C. Moncayo; Zoraida Fernandez; Diana Ortiz; Mawlouth Diallo; Amadou A. Sall; Sammie Hartman; C. Todd Davis; Lark L. Coffey; Christian Mathiot; Robert B. Tesh; Scott C. Weaver

Endemic dengue virus (DENV) type 2 strains infect Aedes aegypti and Ae. albopictus more efficiently than ancestral sylvatic strains, which suggests that adaptation to these vectors mediated DENV emergence.


Journal of Medical Primatology | 1997

RELATION BETWEEN PHYLOGENY OF AFRICAN GREEN MONKEY CD4 GENES AND THEIR RESPECTIVE SIMIAN IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS GENES

Anders Fomsgaard; Michaela Müller-Trutwin; Ousmane M. Diop; Jan Hansen; Christian Mathiot; Sylvie Corbet; Françoise Barré-Sinoussi; Jonathan S. Allan

Abstract: An apparent species‐specific relatedness of SIVagm suggests a coevolution with their natural hosts. However, the exact species or subspecies classification of African green monkeys, AGM, is uncertain because current classification schemes rely on phenotype markers, while more definitive genetic data are lacking. In this study, the CD4 protein involved in tissue type recognition was genetically cloned and sequenced from PBMC RNA from all AGM species, including Barbados green monkeys (BGM). Phylogenetic trees were constructed that also included genomic CD4 nucleotide sequences from patas, sooty mangabeys, rhesus and pig‐tail macaques, chimpanzees, and humans. Chimpanzees and humans consistently clustered together. Monkeys within the Cercopithecus genus formed a separate cluster which included pata monkeys, supporting its grouping as a member of Cercopithecus. Surprisingly, sooty mangabeys were genetically more closely related to Asian macaques than to other African species, which might explain why macaques are more susceptible to infection by the SIVsm group than to infection by SIVagm or HIV‐1 and why patas, on the other hand, are highly susceptible to SIVagm infection. Based on CD4 genetic data, tantalus, vervets, grivets, and sabaeus formed separate subgroups with BGM grouping closely with vervets. The branching order of the AGM species was related to that of their respective SIVagm env sequences. The study suggests a strong correlation between CD4 phylogeny and the susceptibility of the host species to infection by a specific lentivirus and supports the assumption of a coevolution of SIVagm and AGM. CD4 sequencing is suggested as a relevant method for genetic determination of primate species.


AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses | 1993

Diversity of V3 Region Sequences of Human Immunodeficiency Viruses Type 1 from the Central African Republic

Ellen Murphy; Bette Korber; Marie-Claude Georges-Courbot; Bruno You; Abraham Pinter; Debra Cook; Marie-Paule Kieny; Alain J. Georges; Christian Mathiot; Françoise Barré-Sinoussi; Marc Girard


AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses | 1996

Diversity of Antibody Binding to V3 Peptides Representing Consensus Sequences of HIV Type 1 Genotypes A to E: An Approach for HIV Type 1 Serological Subtyping

Francis Barin; Yousra Lahbabi; Laurence Buzelay; Bernard Lejeune; Armelle Baillou-Beaufils; François Denis; Christian Mathiot; Souleymane Mboup; Vicharn Vithayasai; Ursula Dietrich; Alain Goudeau


Virology | 1994

Seroepidemiologic, molecular, and phylogenetic analyses of simian T-cell leukemia viruses (STLV-I) from various naturally infected monkey species from central and western Africa.

Nitin K. Saksena; Vincent Herve; Jean Paul Durand; Bernard Leguenno; Ousmane M. Diop; Jean Pierre Digoutte; Christian Mathiot; Michaela C. Müller; Jayne L. Love; Syamalima Dube; Michael P. Sherman; Patricia Benz; Selda Erensoy; Ann Galat-Luong; Gérard Galat; Baishali Paul; Dipak K. Dube; Françoise Barré Sinoussi; Bernard J. Poiesz


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2000

Epidemiological and virological influenza survey in Dakar, Senegal: 1996-1998.

Annick Dosseh; Kader Ndiaye; André Spiegel; Monique Sagna; Christian Mathiot


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2005

POTENTIAL ROLE OF SYLVATIC AND DOMESTIC AFRICAN MOSQUITO SPECIES IN DENGUE EMERGENCE

Mawlouth Diallo; Amadou A. Sall; Abelardo C. Moncayo; Yamar Ba; Zoraida Fernandez; Diana Ortiz; Lark L. Coffey; Christian Mathiot; Robert B. Tesh; Scott C. Weaver


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2001

Rift Valley Fever Outbreak, Mauritania, 1998: Seroepidemiologic, Virologic, Entomologic, and Zoologic Investigations

Nabeth P; Kane Y; Abdalahi Mo; Mawlouth Diallo; Ndiaye K; Ba K; Schneegans F; Amadou A. Sall; Christian Mathiot

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