Laboratory of Parasitic Diseases, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, USA.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2011 Aug;5(8):e1288. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0001288. Epub 2011 Aug 23.
To identify parameters of Leishmania infection within a population of infected sand flies that reliably predict subsequent transmission to the mammalian host, we sampled groups of infected flies and compared infection intensity and degree of metacyclogenesis with the frequency of transmission. The percentage of parasites within the midgut that were metacyclic promastigotes had the highest correlation with the frequency of transmission. Meta-analysis of multiple transmission experiments allowed us to establish a percent-metacyclic "cutoff" value that predicted transmission competence. Sand fly infections initiated with variable doses of parasites resulted in correspondingly altered percentages of metacyclic promastigotes, resulting in altered transmission frequency and disease severity. Lastly, alteration of sand fly oviposition status and environmental conditions at the time of transmission also influenced transmission frequency. These observations have implications for transmission of Leishmania by the sand fly vector in both the laboratory and in nature, including how the number of organisms acquired by the sand fly from an infection reservoir may influence the clinical outcome of infection following transmission by bite.
为了确定感染利什曼原虫的沙蝇种群中可可靠预测后续向哺乳动物宿主传播的参数,我们对感染的蝇群进行了采样,并比较了感染强度和无性生殖阶段形成的程度与传播频率。中肠内处于无性生殖阶段的原虫百分比与传播频率相关性最高。对多个传播实验的荟萃分析使我们能够确定一个可预测传播能力的百分率-无性生殖“截断”值。用不同剂量的寄生虫启动沙蝇感染,会导致相应的无性生殖阶段原虫百分比发生改变,从而改变传播频率和疾病严重程度。最后,沙蝇产卵状态和传播时的环境条件的改变也会影响传播频率。这些观察结果对沙蝇媒介传播利什曼原虫在实验室和自然界中的情况都有影响,包括沙蝇从感染源获得的生物体数量如何影响传播后的感染临床结果。