Environmental Health and Ecological Sciences Department, Ifakara Health Institute, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.
Institute of Biodiversity, Animal Health and Comparative Medicine, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, G12 8QQ, UK.
Malar J. 2023 Aug 16;22(1):238. doi: 10.1186/s12936-023-04671-7.
The use of insecticide-treated nets for malaria control has been associated with shifts in mosquito vector feeding behaviour including earlier and outdoor biting on humans. The relative contribution of phenotypic plasticity and heritability to these behavioural shifts is unknown. Elucidation of the mechanisms behind these shifts is crucial for anticipating impacts on vector control.
A novel portable semi-field system (PSFS) was used to experimentally measure heritability of biting time in the malaria vector Anopheles arabiensis in Tanzania. Wild An. arabiensis from hourly collections using the human landing catch (HLC) method were grouped into one of 3 categories based on their time of capture: early (18:00-21:00), mid (22:00-04:00), and late (05:00-07:00) biting, and placed in separate holding cages. Mosquitoes were then provided with a blood meal for egg production and formation of first filial generation (F1). The F1 generation of each biting time phenotype category was reared separately, and blood fed at the same time as their mothers were captured host-seeking. The resultant eggs were used to generate the F2 generation for use in heritability assays. Heritability was assessed by releasing F2 An. arabiensis into the PSFS, recording their biting time during a human landing catch and comparing it to that of their F0 grandmothers.
In PSFS assays, the biting time of F2 offspring (early: 18:00-21:00, mid: 22:00-04:00 or late: 05:00-07:00) was significantly positively associated with that of their wild-caught F0 grandmothers, corresponding to an estimated heritability of 0.110 (95% CI 0.003, 0.208). F2 from early-biting F0 were more likely to bite early than F2 from mid or late-biting F0. Similarly, the probability of biting late was higher in F2 derived from mid and late-biting F0 than from early-biting F0.
Despite modest heritability, our results suggest that some of the variation in biting time is attributable to additive genetic variation. Selection can, therefore, act efficiently on mosquito biting times, highlighting the need for control methods that target early and outdoor biting mosquitoes.
使用经杀虫剂处理的蚊帐来控制疟疾已经导致了蚊子传播媒介的摄食行为发生变化,包括更早和在户外叮咬人类。然而,对于这些行为变化,表型可塑性和遗传性的相对贡献尚不清楚。阐明这些变化背后的机制对于预测对媒介控制的影响至关重要。
本文使用一种新颖的便携式半野外系统(PSFS)来实验性地测量坦桑尼亚疟疾媒介按蚊的叮咬时间的遗传性。通过使用人体诱捕器(HLC)方法每小时进行采集,将野生按蚊 Arabiensis 分为 3 组,根据捕获时间分为早期(18:00-21:00)、中期(22:00-04:00)和晚期(05:00-07:00),并放置在单独的饲养笼中。然后给蚊子提供一顿血餐来产卵和形成第一代(F1)。每个叮咬时间表型类别的 F1 代被分别饲养,并在与母亲同时捕获寻找宿主时进行吸血。产生的卵用于生成用于遗传力测定的 F2 代。通过将 F2 代按蚊释放到 PSFS 中,记录它们在人体诱捕器中的叮咬时间,并将其与 F0 祖母的叮咬时间进行比较,来评估遗传力。
在 PSFS 测定中,F2 代后代(早期:18:00-21:00、中期:22:00-04:00 或晚期:05:00-07:00)的叮咬时间与野生捕获的 F0 祖母显著正相关,这对应于 0.110 的估计遗传力(95%CI 0.003, 0.208)。来自早期叮咬 F0 的 F2 比来自中期或晚期叮咬 F0 的 F2 更有可能早叮咬。同样,来自中期和晚期叮咬 F0 的 F2 比来自早期叮咬 F0 的 F2 更有可能晚叮咬。
尽管遗传力适中,但我们的结果表明,部分叮咬时间的变化归因于加性遗传变异。因此,选择可以有效地作用于蚊子的叮咬时间,这凸显了需要针对早叮咬和户外叮咬的蚊子的控制方法。