Department of Immunology and Infectious Diseases, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.
Center for Communicable Disease Dynamics, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.
Nat Commun. 2016 May 31;7:11772. doi: 10.1038/ncomms11772.
The maternally inherited alpha-proteobacterium Wolbachia has been proposed as a tool to block transmission of devastating mosquito-borne infectious diseases like dengue and malaria. Here we study the reproductive manipulations induced by a recently identified Wolbachia strain that stably infects natural mosquito populations of a major malaria vector, Anopheles coluzzii, in Burkina Faso. We determine that these infections significantly accelerate egg laying but do not induce cytoplasmic incompatibility or sex-ratio distortion, two parasitic reproductive phenotypes that facilitate the spread of other Wolbachia strains within insect hosts. Analysis of 221 blood-fed A. coluzzii females collected from houses shows a negative correlation between the presence of Plasmodium parasites and Wolbachia infection. A mathematical model incorporating these results predicts that infection with these endosymbionts may reduce malaria prevalence in human populations. These data suggest that Wolbachia may be an important player in malaria transmission dynamics in Sub-Saharan Africa.
人们提出,从母系遗传的α-变形菌沃尔巴克氏体可以作为一种工具,阻断登革热和疟疾等具有破坏性的蚊媒传染病的传播。在这里,我们研究了最近发现的一种沃尔巴克氏体菌株所引起的生殖操纵,该菌株稳定感染布基纳法索主要疟疾媒介按蚊属的自然蚊群。我们确定,这些感染显著加速了产卵,但不会诱导细胞质不亲和或性别比例扭曲,这两种寄生生殖表型有助于其他沃尔巴克氏体菌株在昆虫宿主中的传播。对从房屋中收集的 221 只吸食血液的按蚊属雌性进行的分析表明,沃尔巴克氏体感染与疟原虫寄生虫的存在呈负相关。纳入这些结果的数学模型预测,感染这些内共生体可能会降低人群中的疟疾患病率。这些数据表明,沃尔巴克氏体可能是撒哈拉以南非洲疟疾传播动态的重要参与者。