Department of Disease Control, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
Malaria Consortium, London, UK.
Parasit Vectors. 2018 Oct 26;11(1):560. doi: 10.1186/s13071-018-3150-8.
Environmental factors, especially ambient temperature and relative humidity affect both mosquitoes and malaria parasites. The early part of sporogony is most sensitive and is affected by high temperatures and temperature fluctuation immediately following ingestion of an infectious blood meal. The aim of this study was to explore whether environmental variables such as temperature, together with the presence of the kdr insecticide resistance mutations, have an impact on survival probability and infection rates in wild Anopheles gambiae (s.s.) exposed and unexposed to a pyrethroid insecticide.
Anopheles gambiae (s.s.) were collected as larvae, reared to adults, and fed on blood samples from 42 Plasmodium falciparum-infected local patients at a health facility in mid-western Uganda, then exposed either to nets treated with sub-lethal doses of deltamethrin or to untreated nets. After seven days, surviving mosquitoes were dissected and their midguts examined for oocysts. Prevalence (proportion infected) and intensity of infection (number of oocysts per infected mosquito) were recorded for each group. Mosquito mortality was recorded daily. Temperature and humidity were recorded every 30 minutes throughout the experiments.
Our findings indicate that apart from the effect of deltamethrin exposure, mean daily temperature during the incubation period, temperature range during the first 24 hours and on day 4 post-infectious feed had a highly significant effect on the risk of infection. Deltamethrin exposure still significantly impaired survival of kdr homozygous mosquitoes, while mean daily temperature and relative humidity during the incubation period independently affected mosquito mortality. Significant differences in survival of resistant genotypes were detected, with the lowest survival recorded in mosquitoes with heterozygote L1014S/L1014F genotype.
This study confirmed that the early part of sporogony is most affected by temperature fluctuations, while environmental factors affect mosquito survival. The impact of insecticide resistance on malaria infection and vector survival needs to be assessed separately for mosquitoes with different resistance mechanisms to fully understand its implications for currently available vector control tools and malaria transmission.
环境因素,尤其是环境温度和相对湿度,会同时影响蚊子和疟原虫寄生虫。配子体生殖的早期阶段最为敏感,并且会受到摄入传染性血液餐后立即出现的高温和温度波动的影响。本研究的目的是探索环境变量(如温度)以及 kdr 杀虫剂抗性突变的存在是否会影响野外冈比亚按蚊(s.s.)的生存概率和感染率,这些蚊子接触或未接触过拟除虫菊酯杀虫剂。
从乌干达中西部一个卫生机构的 42 位疟原虫感染当地患者的血液样本中收集冈比亚按蚊(s.s.)幼虫,将其饲养为成虫,然后让它们吸食血液样本,再将其暴露于接受亚致死剂量的溴氰菊酯处理的蚊帐或未处理的蚊帐中。七天后,对存活的蚊子进行解剖,并检查其中肠是否有卵囊。记录每组的感染率(感染比例)和感染强度(每只感染蚊子的卵囊数量)。每天记录蚊子死亡率。在整个实验过程中,每 30 分钟记录一次温度和湿度。
我们的研究结果表明,除了溴氰菊酯暴露的影响外,孵化期内的日平均温度、前 24 小时内的温度范围以及感染性饲料后第 4 天的温度,对感染风险有高度显著影响。溴氰菊酯暴露仍然显著降低了 kdr 纯合子蚊子的存活率,而孵化期内的日平均温度和相对湿度则独立影响蚊子的死亡率。还检测到抗性基因型的存活率存在显著差异,具有 L1014S/L1014F 杂合基因型的蚊子存活率最低。
本研究证实,配子体生殖的早期阶段最易受到温度波动的影响,而环境因素会影响蚊子的生存。需要单独评估不同抗性机制的蚊子对杀虫剂的抗性对疟疾感染和媒介生存的影响,以充分了解其对当前可用的病媒控制工具和疟疾传播的影响。