Sorin Dinu
University of Bucharest
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Sorin Dinu.
Eurosurveillance | 2015
Sorin Dinu; Cotar Ai; Pănculescu-Gătej Ir; Fălcuţă E; Prioteasa Fl; Sîrbu A; Oprişan G; Bădescu D; P Reiter; Cornelia Svetlana Ceianu
Lineage 2 West Nile virus (WNV), previously found only in sub-Saharan Africa and Madagascar, was identified in Hungary in 2004 and has rapidly expanded in Europe in the past decade. Following a significant outbreak of West Nile fever with neurological cases caused by lineage 1 WNV in Romania in 1996, scattered cases have been recorded in the south-east of the country in each transmission season. Another outbreak, affecting a larger area and caused by lineage 2 WNV, was recorded in 2010. We analysed human sera from neuroinvasive West Nile fever cases and mosquitoes, sampled in south-eastern Romania between 2011 and 2013, for the presence of WNV genome, and obtained partial NS5 and envelope glycoprotein sequences. Human- and mosquito-derived WNV sequences were highly similar (99%) to Volgograd 2007 lineage 2 WNV and differed from isolates previously detected in central and southern Europe. WNV was detected in one pool of Culex pipiens s.l. males, documenting vertical transmission. Lineage 4 WNV, of unknown pathogenicity to mammals, was found in the amphibian-feeding mosquito Uranotaenia unguiculata from the Danube Delta. Our results present molecular evidence for the maintenance of the same isolates of Volgograd 2007-like lineage 2 WNV in south-eastern Romania between 2011 and 2013.
Journal of The American Mosquito Control Association | 2015
Liviu Florian Prioteasa; Sorin Dinu; Elena Fălcuţă; Cornelia Svetlana Ceianu
Abstract During an entomological investigation carried out in Bucharest and surroundings in fall of 2012, 45 adult mosquitoes (38 females and 7 males) of Aedes albopictus were collected in a neighborhood from the southern area of the city. The morphological identification of the species was further confirmed by sequencing 2 mitochondrial DNA markers: the cytochrome c oxidase subunit I and NADH dehydrogenase subunit 5 genes. Aedes albopictus was collected again in 2013 in the same area from July until October. During late summer the species was found also in another location in the city, downtown Bucharest. Larvae were found in water barrels and other types of household containers, as well as in rain catch basins. In 2014, following a nuisance complaint of a Bucharest inhabitant, the entomological investigation found aggressive Ae. albopictus adults on his property that harbored many mosquito larvae in container-type breeding habitats. These findings are the 1st records of this invasive species and of its breeding population in Romania, and show maintenance of the species over 2 winter seasons. Surveillance of the species outside the area of the capital city was not performed, therefore it is not known whether Ae. albopictus has been introduced in other regions of the country. The presence of Ae. albopictus has been reported every year (2012–14) to competent public health authorities, stressing on the importance of surveillance and of implementation of control measures.
Travel Medicine and Infectious Disease | 2015
Sorin Dinu; Ioana R. Pănculescu-Gătej; Simin Aysel Florescu; Corneliu Petru Popescu; Anca Sirbu; Gabriela Oprişan; Daniela Bădescu; Leticia Franco; Cornelia Svetlana Ceianu
BACKGROUND Dengue fever is the commonest arthropod-borne infection worldwide. In recent years, rapid growth in global air travel has resulted in a considerable increase in the incidence of imported cases. In Romania it is now the second most frequent cause for hospitalization (after malaria) in patients arriving from tropical regions. METHODS Serological and molecular diagnostics were applied to samples obtained between 2008 and 2013 from travelers with suspected dengue. Molecular typing was performed by RT-PCR followed by sequencing of the E-NS1 junction. RESULTS Twelve of 37 suspected cases were confirmed and three remained probable. The infections were acquired in endemic regions in Asia, Africa and in Europe (Madeira Island). Dengue virus nucleic acid was detected and sequenced in nine cases. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that the viruses were of genotypes I and V of serotype 1, cosmopolitan genotype of serotype 2 and genotypes I and III of serotype 3. CONCLUSIONS Romanian tourists traveling to dengue-endemic countries are at risk of acquiring dengue infection. Appropriate prevention measures prior to travel and upon return should be taken, particularly as the dengue secondary vector Aedes albopictus is now established in Bucharest.
Vector-borne and Zoonotic Diseases | 2014
Raluca Panculescu-Gatej; Anca Sirbu; Sorin Dinu; Maria Waldstrom; Paul Heyman; Dimitru Murariu; Angela Petrescu; Camelia Szmal; Gabriela Oprişan; Åke Lundkvist; Cornelia Svetlana Ceianu
Hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS) has been confirmed by serological methods during recent years in Romania. In the present study, focus-reduction neutralization tests (FRNT) confirmed Dobrava hantavirus (DOBV) as the causative agent in some HFRS cases, but could not distinguish between DOBV and Saaremaa virus (SAAV) infections in other cases. DOBV was detected by a DOBV-specific TaqMan assay in sera of nine patients out of 22 tested. Partial sequences of the M genomic segment of DOBV were obtained from sera of three patients and revealed the circulation of two DOBV lineages in Romania. Investigation of rodents trapped in Romania found three DOBV-positive Apodemus flavicollis out of 83 rodents tested. Two different DOBV lineages were also detected in A. flavicollis as determined from partial sequences of the M and S genomic segments. Sequences of DOBV in A. flavicollis were either identical or closely related to the sequences obtained from the HFRS patients. The DOBV strains circulating in Romania clustered in two monophyletic groups, together with strains from Slovenia and the north of Greece. This is the first evidence for the circulation of DOBV in wild rodents and for a DOBV etiology of HFRS in Romania.
Parasites & Vectors | 2018
Ani Ioana Cotar; Elena Fălcuță; Sorin Dinu; Adriana Necula; Victoria Bîrluțiu; Cornelia Svetlana Ceianu; Florian Liviu Prioteasa
BackgroundWest Nile virus (WNV) is endemic in southeastern Romania and, after the unprecedented urban epidemic in Bucharest in 1996 caused by lineage 1 WNV, cases of West Nile fever have been recorded every year. Furthermore, a new outbreak occurred in 2010, this time produced by a lineage 2 WNV belonging to the Eastern European clade (Volgograd 2007-like strain), which was detected in humans and mosquitoes in the following years.ResultsWe report here, for the first time, the emergence, in 2015, of lineage 2 WNV belonging to the monophyletic Central/Southern European group of strains which replaced in 2016, the previously endemized lineage 2 WNV Volgograd 2007-like strain in mosquito populations. The emerged WNV strain harbors H249P (NS3 protein) and I159T (E glycoprotein) substitutions, which have been previously associated in other studies with neurovirulence and efficient vector transmission.ConclusionsIn 2016, both early amplification of the emerged WNV and complete replacement in mosquito populations of the previously endemized WNV occurred in southeastern Romania. These events were associated with a significant outbreak of severe West Nile neuroinvasive disease in humans.
Archives of Virology | 2011
Anda Baicus; Ana Persu; Sorin Dinu; Marie-Line Joffret; Francis Delpeyroux; Gabriela Oprişan
Ecohealth | 2016
Ani Ioana Cotar; Elena Falcuta; Liviu Florian Prioteasa; Sorin Dinu; Cornelia Svetlana Ceianu; Shlomit Paz
World Journal of Gastroenterology | 2016
Camelia Sultana; Gabriela Oprişan; Monica Delia Teleman; Sorin Dinu; Cristiana Oprea; Mihai Voiculescu; Simona Ruta
Roumanian archives of microbiology and immunology | 2009
Gabriela Oprişan; Camelia Szmal; Sorin Dinu; Ana Oprisoreanu; Valérie Thiers; Mircea Panait; Dan Oţelea; Penelope Mavromara; Simona Ruţă; Camelia Sultana; Irina Alexiu; Loredana Manolescu; Gabriela Anton; Camelia Grancea; Ana Neagu; Carmen Sencovici; Petre Jacob Calistru; Gratiela Târdei; Adriana Moţoc; Stefan Lazăr; Camelia Ionescu; Emanoil Ceauşu; Cristiana Cristea; Ghe Voiculescu; Dana Brehar-Cioflec; Damian Popovici; Gratiana Chicin; Camelia Claici
Roumanian archives of microbiology and immunology | 2015
Sorin Dinu; Ceauşu E; Târdeil G; Gabriela Oprişan