West Nile virus (WNV), Zika virus (ZIKV), and Dengue virus (DENV) are vector-borne diseases endemic in tropical and subtropical countries around the world. Their incidence has been growing in recent years and they are becoming increasingly relevant even in non-endemic areas, representing a significant public health problem worldwide.Globalization and climate change have led to drastic changes and radical transformations in the development of an ecosystem capable of sustaining the life cycle of viruses even in urban environments, where transmission occurs within an entirely susceptible population, leading to the rapid spread of infection, which can take on an explosive epidemic pattern. Increasing urbanization, population growth, and the continuous evolution of pathogens are additional factors associated with the increasing spread of vector-borne infectious diseases.Our focus is on these three vector-borne diseases, the diagnosis of which is often challenging because geographical and clinical overlap and serological cross reactions makes differential diagnosis very difficult.
Flaviviruses proteases / Zammarchi, Lorenzo; Chechi, Flavia; Spinicci, Michele; Bartoloni, Alessandro. - In: THE ENZYMES. - ISSN 1874-6047. - ELETTRONICO. - 58:(2025), pp. 251-278. [10.1016/bs.enz.2025.07.004]
Flaviviruses proteases
Zammarchi, Lorenzo;Chechi, Flavia;Spinicci, Michele;Bartoloni, Alessandro
2025
Abstract
West Nile virus (WNV), Zika virus (ZIKV), and Dengue virus (DENV) are vector-borne diseases endemic in tropical and subtropical countries around the world. Their incidence has been growing in recent years and they are becoming increasingly relevant even in non-endemic areas, representing a significant public health problem worldwide.Globalization and climate change have led to drastic changes and radical transformations in the development of an ecosystem capable of sustaining the life cycle of viruses even in urban environments, where transmission occurs within an entirely susceptible population, leading to the rapid spread of infection, which can take on an explosive epidemic pattern. Increasing urbanization, population growth, and the continuous evolution of pathogens are additional factors associated with the increasing spread of vector-borne infectious diseases.Our focus is on these three vector-borne diseases, the diagnosis of which is often challenging because geographical and clinical overlap and serological cross reactions makes differential diagnosis very difficult.I documenti in FLORE sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.



