School of Biological Sciences, The University of Queensland, St. Lucia, Queensland, Australia.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2009 Dec 15;3(12):e568. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0000568.
Mosquitoes are vectors of many serious pathogens in tropical and sub-tropical countries. Current control strategies almost entirely rely upon insecticides, which increasingly face the problems of high cost, increasing mosquito resistance and negative effects on non-target organisms. Alternative strategies include the proposed use of inherited life-shortening agents, such as the Wolbachia bacterium. By shortening mosquito vector lifespan, Wolbachia could potentially reduce the vectorial capacity of mosquito populations. We have recently been able to stably transinfect Aedes aegypti mosquitoes with the life-shortening Wolbachia strain wMelPop, and are assessing various aspects of its interaction with the mosquito host to determine its likely impact on pathogen transmission as well as its potential ability to invade A. aegypti populations.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Here we have examined the probing behavior of Wolbachia-infected mosquitoes in an attempt to understand both the broader impact of Wolbachia infection on mosquito biology and, in particular, vectorial capacity. The probing behavior of wMelPop-infected mosquitoes at four adult ages was examined and compared to uninfected controls during video-recorded feeding trials on a human hand. Wolbachia-positive insects, from 15 days of age, showed a drastic increase in the time spent pre-probing and probing relative to uninfected controls. Two other important features for blood feeding, saliva volume and apyrase content of saliva, were also studied.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: As A. aegypti infected with wMelPop age, they show increasing difficulty in completing the process of blood feeding effectively and efficiently. Wolbachia-infected mosquitoes on average produced smaller volumes of saliva that still contained the same amount of apyrase activity as uninfected mosquitoes. These effects on blood feeding behavior may reduce vectorial capacity and point to underlying physiological changes in Wolbachia-infected mosquitoes.
蚊子是热带和亚热带国家许多严重病原体的传播媒介。目前的控制策略几乎完全依赖于杀虫剂,而杀虫剂越来越面临成本高、蚊子抗药性增加和对非目标生物产生负面影响等问题。替代策略包括提议使用遗传性寿命缩短剂,如沃尔巴克氏体。通过缩短蚊子媒介的寿命,沃尔巴克氏体有可能降低蚊子种群的媒介能力。我们最近能够稳定地用缩短寿命的沃尔巴克氏体菌株 wMelPop 转染埃及伊蚊,并正在评估其与蚊子宿主相互作用的各个方面,以确定其对病原体传播的潜在影响以及其侵入埃及伊蚊种群的潜在能力。
方法/主要发现:在这里,我们检查了感染沃尔巴克氏体的蚊子的探测行为,试图了解沃尔巴克氏体感染对蚊子生物学的更广泛影响,特别是媒介能力。在对人类手部进行视频记录的喂食试验中,检查了四个成虫年龄的 wMelPop 感染蚊子的探测行为,并与未感染的对照进行了比较。从 15 天大的起,感染 wMelPop 的昆虫在预探测和探测上花费的时间相对于未感染的对照急剧增加。还研究了另外两个对吸血很重要的特征,即唾液量和唾液中的唾液酶含量。
结论/意义:随着携带 wMelPop 的埃及伊蚊年龄的增长,它们在有效地完成吸血过程方面表现出越来越大的困难。感染 wMelPop 的蚊子平均产生的唾液量较小,但仍含有与未感染蚊子相同数量的唾液酶活性。这些对吸血行为的影响可能会降低媒介能力,并指出感染沃尔巴克氏体的蚊子存在潜在的生理变化。