Wits Research Institute for Malaria and Wits/MRC Collaborating Centre for Multidisciplinary Research On Malaria, School of Pathology, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Centre for Emerging Zoonotic and Parasitic Diseases, National Institute for Communicable Diseases, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Malar J. 2019 Jul 29;18(1):257. doi: 10.1186/s12936-019-2889-5.
Understanding the contribution of outdoor-resting Anopheles mosquitoes to residual malaria transmission is important in terms of scaling up vector control towards malaria elimination in South Africa. The aim of this project was to assess the potential role of Anopheles parensis and other Anopheles species in residual malaria transmission, using sentinel surveillance sites in the uMkhanyakude District of northern KwaZulu-Natal Province.
Monthly vector surveillance was conducted at the sentinel sites from January 2017 to May 2018. Outdoor-placed clay pot resting traps were used to collect male and female adult Anopheles mosquitoes. All Anopheles gambiae complex and Anopheles funestus group specimens collected were identified to species and all females were screened for Plasmodium falciparum circumsporozoite protein (CSP) by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Samples showing infectivity for P. falciparum were further verified by a nested PCR and subsequent DNA sequence analysis.
From a sample of 491 anophelines, Anopheles arabiensis (n = 228) and An. parensis (n = 194) were the most abundant. Other species collected included Anopheles merus (n =11), Anopheles quadriannulatus (n = 10), Anopheles leesoni (n = 29), Anopheles rivulorum (n =18), and Anopheles vaneedeni (n =1). Of the 317 female specimens screened for P. falciparum CSP, one Anopheles arabiensis and one An. parensis showed positive by ELISA and Plasmodium nested PCR. For the An. parensis specimen, confirmation of its species identity was based on sequence analysis of the ITS2 region, and the presence of P. falciparum DNA was further confirmed by sequence analysis.
Anopheles parensis is a potential vector of malaria in South Africa although its contribution to transmission is likely to be minimal at best owing to its strong zoophilic tendency. By contrast, An. arabiensis is a major vector that is primarily responsible for the bulk of residual malaria transmission in South Africa. As all recently collected sporozoite-positive Anopheles mosquitoes were found in outdoor-placed resting traps, it is necessary to introduce interventions that can be used to control outdoor-resting vector populations while maintaining the efficacy of South Africa's indoor house spraying operations.
了解户外栖息的按蚊对残留疟疾传播的贡献,对于南非扩大病媒控制以消除疟疾至关重要。本项目的目的是评估在北夸祖鲁-纳塔尔省乌姆坎加库德地区的哨点监测点,利用按蚊栖息监测评估斑蚊属和其他按蚊属在残留疟疾传播中的潜在作用。
2017 年 1 月至 2018 年 5 月,在哨点每月进行一次蚊虫监测。使用户外放置的粘土罐诱蚊器收集雄性和雌性成蚊。收集到的所有冈比亚按蚊复合体和致倦库蚊组标本均进行物种鉴定,所有雌性标本均采用酶联免疫吸附试验(ELISA)检测疟原虫环子孢子蛋白(CSP)。对显示感染疟原虫的样本进行巢式 PCR 和随后的 DNA 序列分析进一步验证。
从 491 只按蚊样本中,阿蚊(n=228)和斑蚊(n=194)最为丰富。其他收集到的物种包括斑须按蚊(n=11)、四带按蚊(n=10)、莱氏按蚊(n=29)、里夫按蚊(n=18)和范氏按蚊(n=1)。在 317 只雌性标本中筛查疟原虫 CSP,有一只阿蚊和一只斑蚊通过 ELISA 和疟原虫巢式 PCR 呈阳性。对斑蚊标本进行 ITS2 区序列分析,确认其物种身份,并通过序列分析进一步确认疟原虫 DNA 的存在。
斑蚊属在南非是疟疾的潜在传播媒介,尽管由于其强烈的嗜动物习性,其对传播的贡献可能最小。相比之下,阿蚊是主要的媒介,主要负责南非残留疟疾传播的大部分。由于最近采集的所有带孢子的阳性按蚊均在户外放置的诱蚊器中发现,因此有必要引入干预措施来控制户外栖息的媒介种群,同时保持南非室内喷洒作业的效果。