Asako Haraguchi, Moeka Gonda, Kazuhiko Nakayama, Kanta Fujiwara, Jun Hakozaki, Sakure Nakamura, Kodai Kusakisako, Hiromi Ikadai
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective:Anopheles mosquitoes transmit Plasmodium parasites through blood feeding. The oocyst stage in mosquitoes is crucial for Plasmodium transmission. Oocysts can form without a blood meal or the midgut passage and utilize nutrients from additional blood feeding. However, it remains unclear the impact of a blood meal during infection on oocysts. The present study evaluated how a blood meal during infection impacts oocyst growth to better understand oocyst development. Methods: We used a novel method for Plasmodium infection known as enema injection, which involves injecting Plasmodium berghei (ANKA strain) into the midgut lumen of Anopheles stephensi mosquitoes (STE2 strain) via the anus, traversing the midgut wall without a blood meal. We compared the size of oocysts in mosquitoes infected by enema injection alone, hemocoel injection alone, and each infection method combined with uninfected blood feeding, as well as those only with infected blood feeding. Results: By enema injection with Plasmodium ookinetes, oocysts formed solely in the mosquito's midgut. Oocysts from enema-injected mosquitoes were similar in size to those from hemocoel-injected mosquitoes. Oocysts from mosquitoes infected by enema injection combined with uninfected blood feeding were larger than oocysts from mosquitoes infected by enema injection alone. However, the size of oocysts from mosquitoes infected by hemocoel injection was not affected by the presence or absence of blood feeding. Conclusion: Enema injection with Plasmodium ookinetes is applicable to Anopheles mosquitoes. Using the enema injection method, we suggest that a blood meal during infection might facilitate oocyst growth within the midgut.
期刊介绍:
Vector-Borne and Zoonotic Diseases is an authoritative, peer-reviewed journal providing basic and applied research on diseases transmitted to humans by invertebrate vectors or non-human vertebrates. The Journal examines geographic, seasonal, and other risk factors that influence the transmission, diagnosis, management, and prevention of this group of infectious diseases, and identifies global trends that have the potential to result in major epidemics.
Vector-Borne and Zoonotic Diseases coverage includes:
-Ecology
-Entomology
-Epidemiology
-Infectious diseases
-Microbiology
-Parasitology
-Pathology
-Public health
-Tropical medicine
-Wildlife biology
-Bacterial, rickettsial, viral, and parasitic zoonoses