'California encephalitis virus' causes
encephalitis in humans.
Mosquitos serve as its
vectors. For this reason this virus is known as an
arbovirus (arthropod-borne virus).
California encephalitis virus belongs to the
Bunyaviridae family of viruses, and the genus
Bunyavirus. It was first discovered in
1943 in the California Central Valley region of the
United States and is a rare cause of disease in the Western World.
Initial infection by the virus and primary viremia causes the onset of non-specific symptoms such as headache and fever. Secondary viremia and the multiplication of the virus in the CNS causes symptoms such as stiff neck,
lethargy and
seizures. It can also cause
encephalitis, when inflammation of the brain produced by infection of the virus damages nerve cells, which affects signalling of the brain to the body.
The virus particle is enveloped and contains three nucleocapsids. The envelope conatins G1 glycoproteins and neutralising
antibodies against these proteins block fusion of the virus with host cells and inhibit
haemagglutination. The virus gemone is over 12000
nucleotides in length and consists of three segments of various sized single-stranded
RNA (negative sense and ambi-sense).
CEV is closely related to
La Crosse Virus.
References
★ http://medinfo.ufl.edu/year2/mmid/bms5300/bugs/cenceph.html