Evidence of Human Bourbon Virus Infections, North Carolina, USA
Published: 17 March 2026| Version 2 | DOI: 10.17632/mjb5vc2cvb.2
Contributors:
, , , , Description
Bourbon virus (BRBV) is an emerging pathogen that can cause severe and fatal disease in humans. BRBV is vectored by Amblyomma americanum (lone star ticks), which are widely distributed across the central, southern, and eastern United States. This data describes human serum neutralizing activity against bourbon virus in a residential cohorts from North Carolina, USA.
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Human serum collected from three different cohorts from residents from North Carolina, Bourbon virus neutralizing activity measured by focus reduction neutralization test. Percentage of inhibition, IC50, IC90 values were measured by GraphPad Prism software.
Institutions
- Washington University in St. LouisMO, Saint Louis
- University of North Carolina at Chapel HillNC, Chapel Hill
Categories
Microbiology, Tick-Borne Virus, Seroepidemiology, Infectious Animal Disease
Funders
Additional Metadata for Digital Commons Data@Becker
| Keywords | Bourbon Virus, Serosurveillance, Tick-Borne Virus, Alpha Gal |
| Revision History | v2: Add ROR ID. |