Comparative susceptibility of wild and laboratory-reared Aedes and Anopheles larvae to ivermectin.

IF 3 3区 医学 Q3 INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Cheick Oumar W Ouédraogo, Fabrice A Somé, André B Sagna, Emmanuel Sougué, Dieudonné D Soma, Mady Ndiaye, Fangala Hamidou Coulibaly, Sié H Pooda, Lamidi Zela, Christophe Roberge, El Hadji A Niang, Karine Mouline, Roch K Dabiré
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Administering ivermectin to humans and livestock renders their blood toxic for mosquitoes like Anopheles and Aedes, offering a promising approach for controlling these vectors. However, the impact of such treatment on larval stages exposed to the drug through contaminated breeding sites is not fully understood. This study looked at how ivermectin affects the development of Aedes and Anopheles larvae.

Methods: Four instars laboratory-reared (Anopheles gambiae Kisumu strain and Aedes aegypti Bora Bora strain) and wild-derived (Anopheles coluzzii VK5 and Ae. aegypti Bobo) larvae were exposed to ivermectin-medium containing the molecule at concentrations ranging from 0 to 100 ng/ml for 24 h, then transferred surviving larvae into ivermectin-free medium to monitor development until adult stage and female fecundity. Parameters measured were: larval survival, pupation dynamics, teneral emergence rates, and fecundity of the adult females in terms of numbers of eggs developed and laid. Two independent experiments were performed, each with four biological replicates. Data obtained for each life history parameter were compared between treatments to characterize ivermectin effects.

Results: Data indicated that highest ivermectin concentrations (100, 75, and 50 ng/ml) reduced larval survival by over 50% within 24 to 48 h post-exposure, with varying effects across different strains. Wild-derived larvae showed lower susceptibility to ivermectin compared to laboratory larvae for both Anopheles and Aedes species. The concentrations leading to 50% larval mortality (4-day-LC50) were 3.65 and 1.86 ng/ml for Anopheles VK5 and Kisumu strains, and 15.60 and 2.56 ng/ml for Aedes Bobo and Bora Bora strains, respectively. Notably, while high concentrations severely impacted larval development, low concentration (1 ng/ml) appear to be a sublethal concentration and allowed for adult emergence. No significant effects on the number of laid eggs were observed across the different strains.

Conclusion: Overall, these data showed how development parameters of laboratory-raised and wild-derived Anopheles and Aedes larvae are affected differently by ivermectin, highlighting potential implications for vector control strategies and ecological concerns regarding non-target organisms and environment persistence. Further investigations are planned to understand existing mechanisms allowing wild-derived larvae to better survive than laboratory ones despite the presence of ivermectin in their breeding environment.

野生和实验室饲养伊蚊和按蚊幼虫对伊维菌素的比较敏感性。
背景:对人类和牲畜施用伊维菌素使其血液对按蚊和伊蚊等蚊子具有毒性,为控制这些媒介提供了一种有希望的方法。然而,这种治疗对通过受污染的繁殖场所暴露于该药物的幼虫阶段的影响尚不完全清楚。这项研究着眼于伊维菌素如何影响伊蚊和按蚊幼虫的发育。方法:实验室饲养的4龄冈比亚按蚊基苏姆菌株和埃及伊蚊博拉博拉菌株,野生衍生的科鲁兹按蚊VK5和伊蚊;将埃及伊蚊(Bobo)幼虫置于含该分子的浓度为0 ~ 100 ng/ml的伊维菌素培养基中24 h,然后将存活的幼虫转移到不含伊维菌素的培养基中,监测其发育至成虫期和雌性繁殖力。测量参数为:幼虫存活率、化蛹动态、总羽化率和成虫产卵数。进行了两个独立的实验,每个实验有4个生物重复。将获得的每个生活史参数的数据在治疗之间进行比较,以表征伊维菌素的效果。结果:数据显示,最高伊维菌素浓度(100、75和50 ng/ml)在暴露后24至48小时内使幼虫存活率降低50%以上,不同菌株的效果不同。与实验室按蚊和伊蚊幼虫相比,野生幼虫对伊维菌素的敏感性较低。VK5按蚊和Kisumu按蚊致50%幼虫死亡(4 d lc50)的浓度分别为3.65和1.86 ng/ml, Bobo伊蚊和Bora Bora伊蚊致50%幼虫死亡的浓度分别为15.60和2.56 ng/ml。值得注意的是,虽然高浓度严重影响幼虫的发育,但低浓度(1 ng/ml)似乎是亚致死浓度,并允许成虫羽化。不同菌株对产蛋量无显著影响。结论:总体而言,这些数据显示了伊维菌素对实验室饲养和野生来源的按蚊和伊蚊幼虫的发育参数有不同的影响,突出了媒介控制策略和对非目标生物和环境持久性的生态关注的潜在影响。计划进行进一步的调查,以了解现有的机制,使野生衍生的幼虫在繁殖环境中存在伊维菌素的情况下比实验室的幼虫更好地存活。
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
Malaria Journal
Malaria Journal 医学-寄生虫学
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
23.30%
发文量
334
审稿时长
2-4 weeks
期刊介绍: Malaria Journal is aimed at the scientific community interested in malaria in its broadest sense. It is the only journal that publishes exclusively articles on malaria and, as such, it aims to bring together knowledge from the different specialities involved in this very broad discipline, from the bench to the bedside and to the field.
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