bioRxiv preprint

Jamestown Canyon virus rapidly adapts to mosquito cells through multiple M segment mutations

Jamestown Canyon virus (JCV) is a mosquito-borne orthobunyavirus with an unusually broad host and vector range. Despite increasing mosquito-to-human spillover, the viral determinants governing host adaptation remain poorly defined. We examined changes in JCV replication during serial passage in mosquito cells and sought to link adaptive changes in viral fitness to specific genetic mutations. In mosquito-derived C6/36 cells, JCV exhibited a distinct lag-burst phenotype in which viral replication remained nearly undetectable for 10 days before abruptly increasing. Strikingly, following reinfection of fresh C6/36 cells, JCV that had been passaged once in mosquito cells exhibited immediate, robu

cell biologymicrobiology