Larval environment influences vector competence of the malaria mosquito Anopheles gambiae.

MalariaWorld journal Pub Date : 2016-06-29 eCollection Date: 2016-01-01 DOI:10.5281/zenodo.10798340
Antoine M G Barreaux, Priscille Barreaux, Kevin Thievent, Jacob C Koella
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Abstract

Background: While environmental factors such as temperature can influence the vector competence of mosquitoes directly, for example by affecting the longevity of the mosquito and the development of the malaria parasite they may also have an indirect impact on the parasite's transmission. By influencing larval development, they may affect the adult traits that are important for the parasite's development and transmission. We studied the influence of two larval environmental factors, food availability and temperature, on the probability that mosquitoes infected with the malaria parasite survived to harbour sporozoites in their salivary glands.

Materials and methods: Anopheles gambiae larvae were reared at 21ºC, 25ºC or 29ºC, and fed either a standard larval diet or half of it. Adults could blood feed on mice harbouring the infectious gametocytic stage of Plasmodium berghei ANKA transformed with green fluorescent protein (GFP). Survival was assessed every 24 hrs up to 21 days post infection, when surviving mosquitoes were dissected to check the salivary glands for sporozoites with a fluorescent microscope sensitive to GFP. Using a binomial GLM we analysed 'vector competence', i.e. if mosquitoes survived until dissection and harboured sporozoites in their salivary glands.

Results: Vector competence dropped by about a third if we fed larvae half the standard food regime. The effect of temperature during the larval period depended strongly on the food regime. At low food, increasing temperature from 21ºC to 29ºC increased vector competence from about 0.18 to 0.48, whereas at standard food, vector competence dropped from about 0.67 at 21ºC to 0.56 at 29ºC.

Conclusions: Thus, perceptions and models about the role of environmental change on the transmission of malaria should include how the environment changes adult life-history by influencing larval development.

幼虫环境影响冈比亚按蚊的传病能力
背景:虽然温度等环境因素可以直接影响蚊子的传病能力,例如影响蚊子的寿命和疟原虫的发育,但它们也可能间接影响寄生虫的传播。通过影响幼虫的发育,它们可能会影响对寄生虫的发育和传播非常重要的成虫性状。我们研究了两种幼虫环境因素(食物供应和温度)对感染了疟原虫的蚊子存活下来并在唾液腺中携带孢子虫的概率的影响:冈比亚按蚊幼虫在 21ºC、25ºC 或 29ºC 下饲养,喂食标准幼虫食物或其一半。成虫可以以携带用绿色荧光蛋白(GFP)转化的传染性配子体阶段伯格希氏疟原虫 ANKA 的小鼠为食。每 24 小时评估一次存活率,直至感染后 21 天,然后解剖存活的蚊子,用对 GFP 敏感的荧光显微镜检查唾液腺是否有孢子虫。我们使用二项式 GLM 分析了 "病媒能力",即蚊子是否存活到解剖并在唾液腺中携带孢子虫:结果:如果我们给幼虫喂食一半的标准食物,病媒能力会下降约三分之一。幼虫期温度的影响在很大程度上取决于食物制度。在低食物条件下,温度从 21ºC 升至 29ºC 会使病媒能力从 0.18 提高到 0.48,而在标准食物条件下,病媒能力从 21ºC 时的 0.67 降至 29ºC 时的 0.56:因此,关于环境变化对疟疾传播的作用的认识和模型应包括环境如何通过影响幼虫发育来改变成虫的生活史。
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