Exploiting Wolbachia as a Tool for Mosquito-Borne Disease Control: Pursuing Efficacy, Safety, and Sustainability.

IF 3.3 3区 医学 Q2 MICROBIOLOGY
Riccardo Moretti, Jue Tao Lim, Alvaro Gil Araujo Ferreira, Luigi Ponti, Marta Giovanetti, Chow Jo Yi, Pranav Tewari, Maria Cholvi, Jacob Crawford, Andrew Paul Gutierrez, Stephen L Dobson, Perran A Ross
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Abstract

Despite the application of control measures, mosquito-borne diseases continue to pose a serious threat to human health. In this context, exploiting Wolbachia, a common symbiotic bacterium in insects, may offer effective solutions to suppress vectors or reduce their competence in transmitting several arboviruses. Many Wolbachia strains can induce conditional egg sterility, known as cytoplasmic incompatibility (CI), when infected males mate with females that do not harbor the same Wolbachia infection. Infected males can be mass-reared and then released to compete with wild males, reducing the likelihood of wild females encountering a fertile mate. Furthermore, certain Wolbachia strains can reduce the competence of mosquitoes to transmit several RNA viruses. Through CI, Wolbachia-infected individuals can spread within the population, leading to an increased frequency of mosquitoes with a reduced ability to transmit pathogens. Using artificial methods, Wolbachia can be horizontally transferred between species, allowing the establishment of various laboratory lines of mosquito vector species that, without any additional treatment, can produce sterilizing males or females with reduced vector competence, which can be used subsequently to replace wild populations. This manuscript reviews the current knowledge in this field, describing the different approaches and evaluating their efficacy, safety, and sustainability. Successes, challenges, and future perspectives are discussed in the context of the current spread of several arboviral diseases, the rise of insecticide resistance in mosquito populations, and the impact of climate change. In this context, we explore the necessity of coordinating efforts among all stakeholders to maximize disease control. We discuss how the involvement of diverse expertise-ranging from new biotechnologies to mechanistic modeling of eco-epidemiological interactions between hosts, vectors, Wolbachia, and pathogens-becomes increasingly crucial. This coordination is especially important in light of the added complexity introduced by Wolbachia and the ongoing challenges posed by global change.

尽管采取了控制措施,但蚊子传播的疾病仍对人类健康构成严重威胁。在这种情况下,利用沃尔巴克氏菌这种昆虫体内常见的共生细菌,可以提供有效的解决方案来抑制病媒或降低其传播几种虫媒病毒的能力。当受感染的雄虫与未感染相同沃尔巴克氏菌的雌虫交配时,许多沃尔巴克氏菌菌株可诱导条件性卵不育,即细胞质不相容(CI)。受感染的雄性可被大规模饲养,然后释放出来与野生雄性竞争,从而降低野生雌性遇到可育配偶的可能性。此外,某些狼毒菌株还能降低蚊子传播几种 RNA 病毒的能力。通过 CI,沃尔巴克氏体感染个体可在种群中传播,导致传播病原体能力降低的蚊子数量增加。利用人工方法,沃尔巴克氏体可在物种间横向转移,从而建立各种蚊媒物种的实验室品系,这些品系无需任何额外处理,就能产生病媒能力降低的绝育雄蚊或雌蚊,随后可用于替代野生种群。本手稿回顾了这一领域的现有知识,介绍了不同的方法,并对其有效性、安全性和可持续性进行了评估。文章结合当前几种虫媒病毒疾病的传播、蚊虫对杀虫剂抗药性的增加以及气候变化的影响,讨论了成功、挑战和未来展望。在此背景下,我们探讨了协调所有利益相关者的努力以最大限度地控制疾病的必要性。我们讨论了从新生物技术到宿主、病媒、沃尔巴克氏体和病原体之间生态流行病学相互作用的机理建模等各种专业知识的参与如何变得越来越重要。鉴于沃尔巴克氏菌带来的额外复杂性以及全球变化带来的持续挑战,这种协调尤为重要。
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
Pathogens
Pathogens Medicine-Immunology and Allergy
CiteScore
6.40
自引率
8.10%
发文量
1285
审稿时长
17.75 days
期刊介绍: Pathogens (ISSN 2076-0817) publishes reviews, regular research papers and short notes on all aspects of pathogens and pathogen-host interactions. There is no restriction on the length of the papers. Our aim is to encourage scientists to publish their experimental and theoretical research in as much detail as possible. Full experimental and/or methodical details must be provided for research articles.
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