Laboratory of Eco-Epidemiology, Department of Ecology, Genetics and Evolution, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2009 May 26;3(5):e447. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0000447.
Understanding the factors that affect the host-feeding preferences of triatomine bugs is crucial for estimating transmission risks and predicting the effects of control tactics targeting domestic animals. We tested whether Triatoma infestans bugs prefer to feed on dogs vs. chickens and on dogs vs. cats and whether vector density modified host choices and other vital rates under natural conditions.
Two host choice experiments were conducted in small caged huts with two rooms between which bugs could move freely. Matched pairs of dog-chicken (six) and dog-cat (three) were assigned randomly to two levels of vector abundance and exposed to starved bugs during three nights. Bloodmeals from 1,160 bugs were tested by a direct enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay.
Conditional logistic regression showed that dogs were highly preferred over chickens or cats and that vector density modified host-feeding choices. The relative risk of a bug being blood-engorged increased significantly when it fed only on dog rather than chicken or cat. Bugs achieved higher post-exposure weight at higher vector densities and successive occasions, more so if they fed on a dog rather than on a cat.
Our findings strongly refute the hypothesis that T. infestans prefers to blood-feed on chickens rather than dogs. An increase in dog or cat availability or accessibility will increase the rate of bug feeding on them and exert strong non-linear effects on R(0). When combined with between-dog heterogeneities in exposure, infection, and infectiousness, the strong bug preference for dogs can be exploited to target dogs in general, and even the specific individuals that account for most of the risk, with topical lotions or insecticide-impregnated collars to turn them into baited lethal traps or use them as transmission or infestation sentinels based on their immune response to Trypanosoma cruzi or bug salivary antigens.
了解影响三锥虫吸食偏好的因素对于评估传播风险和预测针对家畜的控制策略效果至关重要。我们测试了三锥虫是否更喜欢吸食狗而不是鸡,以及狗而不是猫,以及在自然条件下,向量密度是否会改变宿主选择和其他重要的生活率。
在两个房间之间可以自由移动的小笼式小屋中进行了两项宿主选择实验。将匹配的狗-鸡(六对)和狗-猫(三对)随机分配到两个向量丰度水平,并在三个晚上暴露于饥饿的虫子。通过直接酶联免疫吸附试验检测了 1160 只虫子的血液餐。
条件逻辑回归表明,狗比鸡或猫更受青睐,并且向量密度改变了宿主的喂养选择。当虫子只吸食狗而不是鸡或猫时,被血液充盈的风险相对增加显著增加。在更高的向量密度和连续的情况下,虫子在暴露后体重增加更高,如果它们吸食狗而不是猫,则更是如此。
我们的研究结果强烈驳斥了三锥虫更喜欢吸食鸡而不是狗的假设。狗或猫的可用性或可及性的增加将增加虫子吸食它们的速度,并对 R(0)产生强烈的非线性影响。当与狗之间暴露、感染和传染性的个体间异质性相结合时,虫子对狗的强烈偏好可以被利用来针对一般的狗,甚至是那些占大多数风险的特定个体,使用局部乳液或杀虫剂浸渍项圈,将它们变成诱饵性致命陷阱,或根据它们对克氏锥虫或虫子唾液抗原的免疫反应,将它们用作传播或感染的哨兵。