Department of Immunology and Infectious Diseases, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.
Department of Epidemiology, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.
PLoS Pathog. 2020 Dec 31;16(12):e1009131. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1009131. eCollection 2020 Dec.
Many mosquito species, including the major malaria vector Anopheles gambiae, naturally undergo multiple reproductive cycles of blood feeding, egg development and egg laying in their lifespan. Such complex mosquito behavior is regularly overlooked when mosquitoes are experimentally infected with malaria parasites, limiting our ability to accurately describe potential effects on transmission. Here, we examine how Plasmodium falciparum development and transmission potential is impacted when infected mosquitoes feed an additional time. We measured P. falciparum oocyst size and performed sporozoite time course analyses to determine the parasite's extrinsic incubation period (EIP), i.e. the time required by parasites to reach infectious sporozoite stages, in An. gambiae females blood fed either once or twice. An additional blood feed at 3 days post infection drastically accelerates oocyst growth rates, causing earlier sporozoite accumulation in the salivary glands, thereby shortening the EIP (reduction of 2.3 ± 0.4 days). Moreover, parasite growth is further accelerated in transgenic mosquitoes with reduced reproductive capacity, which mimic genetic modifications currently proposed in population suppression gene drives. We incorporate our shortened EIP values into a measure of transmission potential, the basic reproduction number R0, and find the average R0 is higher (range: 10.1%-12.1% increase) across sub-Saharan Africa than when using traditional EIP measurements. These data suggest that malaria elimination may be substantially more challenging and that younger mosquitoes or those with reduced reproductive ability may provide a larger contribution to infection than currently believed. Our findings have profound implications for current and future mosquito control interventions.
许多蚊子物种,包括主要的疟疾传播媒介冈比亚按蚊,在其生命周期中自然会经历多次吸血、卵发育和产卵的生殖循环。当蚊子被实验性感染疟原虫时,这种复杂的蚊子行为经常被忽视,限制了我们准确描述其对传播的潜在影响的能力。在这里,我们研究了当感染的蚊子再次吸血时,疟原虫的发育和传播潜力是如何受到影响的。我们测量了疟原虫卵囊的大小,并进行了子孢子时间过程分析,以确定感染的冈比亚按蚊雌蚊在再次吸血一次或两次后的疟原虫外潜伏期(EIP),即寄生虫达到感染性子孢子阶段所需的时间。在感染后 3 天再次吸血会极大地加速卵囊的生长速度,导致唾液腺中更早地积累子孢子,从而缩短 EIP(减少 2.3 ± 0.4 天)。此外,在生殖能力降低的转基因蚊子中,寄生虫的生长进一步加速,这模拟了目前在种群抑制基因驱动中提出的遗传修饰。我们将缩短的 EIP 值纳入传播潜力的衡量标准,基本繁殖数 R0,并发现撒哈拉以南非洲的平均 R0 更高(范围:增加 10.1%-12.1%),而不是使用传统的 EIP 测量值。这些数据表明,疟疾的消除可能会更加具有挑战性,并且年龄较小的蚊子或生殖能力降低的蚊子可能比目前认为的对感染的贡献更大。我们的发现对当前和未来的蚊子控制干预措施具有深远的影响。