Bernotienė Rasa, Valkiūnas Gediminas
Nature Research Centre, Akademijos 2, 08412, Vilnius, Lithuania.
Malar J. 2016 May 20;15(1):283. doi: 10.1186/s12936-016-1338-y.
Knowledge about feeding preference of blood-sucking insects is important for the better understanding epidemiology of vector-borne parasitic diseases. Extraction of DNA from blood present in abdomens of engorged insects provides opportunities to identify species of their vertebrate hosts. However, this approach often is insufficiently sensitive due to rapid degeneration of host DNA in midguts. Recent studies indicate that avian malaria parasites (Plasmodium spp.) and related haemosporidians (Haemosporida) belonging to Haemoproteus can persist both in vectors and resistant blood-sucking insects for several weeks after initial blood meals, and these parasites can be readily detected by polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based methods. Because avian haemosporidians are cosmopolitan, prevalent and strictly specific to birds, the determination of haemosporidian DNA in blood-sucking dipterans can be used as molecular tags in determining bird-biting insects. This hypothesis was tested by investigation of prevalence of natural haemosporidian infections in wild-caught mosquitoes (Culicidae) and biting midges (Ceratopogonidae: Culicoides).
Females of mosquitoes (1072 individuals of three species) and biting midges (300 individuals of three species) were collected in wildlife using simple netting. They were identified and tested individually for the presence of both the haemosporidian parasites and the bird blood using PCR-based methods. Seven different Haemoproteus and two Plasmodium lineages were detected, with overall infection prevalence of 1.12 and 1.67 % in mosquitoes and biting midges, respectively. In all, the detection rate of avian haemosporidian parasites was three fold higher compared with the detection of avian blood.
Molecular markers of avian malaria parasites and other haemosporidians are recommended for getting additional knowledge about blood-sucking dipterans feeding on bird blood. Many genetic lineages of avian haemosporidians are specific to avian hosts, therefore, the detection of these parasite lineages in blood-sucking insects can indicate their feeding preferences on the level of species or groups of related bird species.
了解吸血昆虫的摄食偏好对于更好地理解媒介传播寄生虫病的流行病学至关重要。从饱血昆虫腹部的血液中提取DNA为鉴定其脊椎动物宿主的物种提供了机会。然而,由于宿主DNA在中肠中迅速降解,这种方法的灵敏度往往不足。最近的研究表明,禽疟原虫(疟原虫属)和属于血变原虫属的相关血孢子虫(血孢子虫目)在初次吸血后可在媒介和抗性吸血昆虫体内持续存在数周,并且这些寄生虫可通过基于聚合酶链反应(PCR)的方法轻松检测到。由于禽血孢子虫分布广泛、普遍存在且严格寄生于鸟类,因此在吸血双翅目中测定血孢子虫DNA可作为确定叮咬鸟类昆虫的分子标记。通过调查野生捕获的蚊子(蚊科)和蠓(蠓科:库蠓属)中自然血孢子虫感染的流行情况对这一假设进行了检验。
使用简易网捕法在野外采集了蚊子(三种1072只个体)和蠓(三种300只个体)的雌性个体。对它们进行了鉴定,并使用基于PCR的方法分别检测血孢子虫寄生虫和鸟类血液的存在情况。检测到七种不同的血变原虫和两种疟原虫谱系,蚊子和蠓的总体感染率分别为1.12%和1.67%。总体而言,禽血孢子虫寄生虫的检出率比禽血的检出率高三倍。
推荐使用禽疟原虫和其他血孢子虫的分子标记来获取有关以鸟类血液为食的吸血双翅目的更多信息。许多禽血孢子虫的遗传谱系对禽类宿主具有特异性,因此,在吸血昆虫中检测这些寄生虫谱系可以表明它们在物种或相关鸟类物种群体水平上的摄食偏好。