Wolbachia-based emerging strategies for control of vector-transmitted disease

IF 2.1 3区 医学 Q2 PARASITOLOGY
Diego Montenegro , Gerardo Cortés-Cortés , María Guadalupe Balbuena-Alonso , Caison Warner , Manel Camps
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Abstract

Dengue fever is a mosquito-transmitted disease of great public health importance. Dengue lacks adequate vaccine protection and insecticide-based methods of mosquito control are proving increasingly ineffective. Here we review the emerging use of mosquitoes transinfected with the obligate intracellular bacterium Wolbachia pipientis for vector control. Wolbachia often induces cytoplasmic incompatibility in its mosquito hosts, resulting in infertile progeny between an infected male and an uninfected female. Wolbachia infection also suppresses the replication of pathogens in the mosquito, a process known as “pathogen blocking”. Two strategies have emerged. The first one releases Wolbachia carriers (both male and female) to replace the wild mosquito population, a process driven by cytoplasmic incompatibility and that becomes irreversible once a threshold is reached. This suppresses disease transmission mainly by pathogen blocking and frequently requires a single intervention. The second strategy floods the field population with an exclusively male population of Wolbachia-carrying mosquitoes to generate infertile hybrid progeny. In this case, transmission suppression depends largely on decreasing the population density of mosquitoes driven by infertility and requires continued mosquito release. The efficacy of both Wolbachia-based approaches has been conclusively demonstrated by randomized and non-randomized studies of deployments across the world. However, results conducted in one setting cannot be directly or easily extrapolated to other settings because dengue incidence is highly affected by the conditions into which the mosquitoes are released. Compared to traditional vector control methods, Wolbachia-based approaches are much more environmentally friendly and can be effective in the medium/long term. On the flip side, they are much more complex and cost-intensive operations, requiring a substantial investment, infrastructure, trained personnel, coordination between agencies, and community engagement. Finally, we discuss recent evidence suggesting that the release of Wolbachia-transinfected mosquitoes has a moderate potential risk of spreading potentially dangerous genes in the environment.

Abstract Image

基于 Wolbachia 的控制病媒传播疾病的新策略。
登革热是一种由蚊子传播的疾病,对公共卫生具有重大意义。登革热缺乏足够的疫苗保护,以杀虫剂为基础的灭蚊方法也越来越无效。在此,我们回顾了新出现的利用转染了琵琶虫Wolbachia的蚊子来控制病媒的方法。沃尔巴克氏菌通常会诱导蚊子宿主的细胞质不相容,导致受感染的雄蚊和未受感染的雌蚊产生不能生育的后代。沃尔巴克氏体感染还能抑制病原体在蚊子体内的复制,这一过程被称为 "病原体阻断"。目前出现了两种策略。第一种是释放沃尔巴克氏体携带者(包括雄蚊和雌蚊)来取代野生蚊子种群,这一过程由细胞质不相容驱动,一旦达到临界值就不可逆转。这主要是通过病原体阻断来抑制疾病传播,通常只需要一次干预。第二种策略是用携带沃尔巴克氏体的纯雄性蚊子淹没野外种群,以产生不能生育的杂交后代。在这种情况下,抑制传播主要取决于降低因不育造成的蚊子种群密度,需要持续释放蚊子。这两种基于沃尔巴克氏体的方法的有效性已通过在世界各地部署的随机和非随机研究得到确证。然而,由于登革热发病率受蚊子释放环境的影响很大,因此在一种环境下取得的结果不能直接或轻易地推断到其他环境。与传统方法相比,基于沃尔巴克氏体的方法更环保,而且在中长期内有效。但另一方面,这些方法也更加复杂,需要大量的投资、基础设施、训练有素的人员、机构间的协调以及社区的参与。最后,我们讨论了最近的证据,这些证据表明,释放的蚊子中转染的沃尔巴克氏体具有在环境中传播基因的中等潜在风险。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Acta tropica
Acta tropica 医学-寄生虫学
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
11.10%
发文量
383
审稿时长
37 days
期刊介绍: Acta Tropica, is an international journal on infectious diseases that covers public health sciences and biomedical research with particular emphasis on topics relevant to human and animal health in the tropics and the subtropics.
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