De Moraes Consuelo M, Stanczyk Nina M, Betz Heike S, Pulido Hannier, Sim Derek G, Read Andrew F, Mescher Mark C
Department of Environmental Systems Science, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH Zürich), CH-8092 Zurich, Switzerland; andDepartments of Entomology and.
Departments of Entomology and.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2014 Jul 29;111(30):11079-84. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1405617111. Epub 2014 Jun 30.
Vector-borne pathogens may alter traits of their primary hosts in ways that influence the frequency and nature of interactions between hosts and vectors. Previous work has reported enhanced mosquito attraction to host organisms infected with malaria parasites but did not address the mechanisms underlying such effects. Here we document malaria-induced changes in the odor profiles of infected mice (relative to healthy individuals) over the course of infection, as well as effects on the attractiveness of infected hosts to mosquito vectors. We observed enhanced mosquito attraction to infected mice during a key period after the subsidence of acute malaria symptoms, but during which mice remained highly infectious. This attraction corresponded to an overall elevation in the volatile emissions of infected mice observed during this period. Furthermore, data analyses--using discriminant analysis of principal components and random forest approaches--revealed clear differences in the composition of the volatile blends of infected and healthy individuals. Experimental manipulation of individual compounds that exhibited altered emission levels during the period when differential vector attraction was observed also elicited enhanced mosquito attraction, indicating that compounds being influenced by malaria infection status also mediate vector host-seeking behavior. These findings provide important insights into the cues that mediate vector attraction to hosts infected with transmissible stages of malaria parasites, as well as documenting characteristic changes in the odors of infected individuals that may have potential value as diagnostic biomarkers of infection.
媒介传播的病原体可能会改变其主要宿主的特征,从而影响宿主与媒介之间相互作用的频率和性质。先前的研究报告称,感染疟原虫的宿主生物体对蚊子的吸引力增强,但未探讨这种影响背后的机制。在此,我们记录了感染过程中疟疾导致的受感染小鼠(相对于健康个体)气味特征的变化,以及对受感染宿主对蚊子媒介吸引力的影响。我们观察到,在急性疟疾症状消退后的关键时期,蚊子对受感染小鼠的吸引力增强,而在此期间小鼠仍具有高度传染性。这种吸引力与在此期间观察到的受感染小鼠挥发性排放的总体升高相对应。此外,数据分析——使用主成分判别分析和随机森林方法——揭示了受感染个体与健康个体挥发性混合物组成的明显差异。对在观察到不同媒介吸引力期间表现出发射水平改变的单个化合物进行实验操作,也引发了蚊子吸引力的增强,这表明受疟疾感染状态影响的化合物也介导了媒介寻找宿主的行为。这些发现为介导媒介对感染疟原虫传播阶段的宿主的吸引力的线索提供了重要见解,同时也记录了受感染个体气味的特征性变化,这些变化可能具有作为感染诊断生物标志物的潜在价值。