Sand fly–associated phlebovirus with evidence of neutralizing antibodies in humans and dogs in Kosovo
Elif Kurum, Xhevat Jakupi, Betim Xhekaj, Katharina Platzgummer, Ina Hoxha, Julia Walochnik, Vít Dvorák, Donjeta Hajdari, Pranvera Abazi, Adelheid G. Obwaller, Jovana Stefanovska, Aleksandar Cvetkovikj, Kurtesh Sherifi, Remi Charrel, Edwin Kniha, Nazli Ayhan

TL;DR
A new sand fly-borne virus, Grapi virus, was discovered in Kosovo, with evidence of human and dog exposure, highlighting its potential zoonotic risk.
Contribution
The discovery and genetic characterization of Grapi virus, along with its seroprevalence in humans and dogs in Kosovo.
Findings
Grapi virus was detected in sand flies and showed high nucleotide identity with Bregalaka virus.
Seroprevalence studies found 13.0% of humans and 2.7% of dogs had GRPV-specific antibodies.
GRPV replicated efficiently in mammalian cells, suggesting adaptation to mammalian hosts.
Abstract
The Balkan Peninsula is a hotspot for sand fly-borne phleboviruses (SbPVs), yet Kosovo had no confirmed viral detection invectors despite serological evidence of human and animal exposure. This study reports the discovery, genetic characterization, and seroprevalence of a novel phlebovirus, Grapi virus (GRPV), in Kosovo. Entomological surveys (2022–2023) collected 3,575 sand flies across seven districts. Morphological and molecular identification revealed Phlebotomus perfiliewi as the dominant species. Pan-phlebovirus RT–PCR screening identified GRPV in seven pools. Complete genome sequencing confirmed its tripartite genome, sharing 97.55-98.70% nucleotide identity with Bregalaka virus, classifying it within the Phlebovirus adanaense species. Phylogenetic analysis revealed segment-specific ancestry, suggesting recombination events between Bregalaka virus, Adana virus, and Medjerda…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsViral Infections and Vectors · Vector-Borne Animal Diseases · Vector-borne infectious diseases
