Laboratory of Veterinary Parasitology, School of Veterinary Medicine, Kitasato University, Aomori, Japan.
Laboratory of Veterinary Biochemistry, School of Veterinary Medicine, Kitasato University, Aomori, Japan.
J Vet Med Sci. 2024 May 6;86(5):485-492. doi: 10.1292/jvms.24-0008. Epub 2024 Apr 3.
Plasmodium parasites within mosquitoes are exposed to various physiological processes, such as blood meal digestion activity, the gonotrophic cycle, and host responses preventing the entry of parasites into the midgut wall. However, when in vitro-cultured ookinetes are injected into the hemocoel of mosquitoes, Plasmodium parasites are not affected by the vertebrate host's blood contents and do not pass through the midgut epithelial cells. This infection method might aid in identifying mosquito-derived factors affecting Plasmodium development within mosquitoes. This study investigated novel mosquito-derived molecules related to parasite development in Anopheles mosquitoes. We injected in vitro-cultured Plasmodium berghei (ANKA strain) ookinetes into female and male Anopheles stephensi (STE2 strain) mosquitoes and found that the oocyst number was significantly higher in males than in females, suggesting that male mosquitoes better support the development of parasites. Next, RNA-seq analysis was performed on the injected female and male mosquitoes to identify genes exhibiting changes in expression. Five genes with different expression patterns between sexes and greatest expression changes were identified as being potentially associated with Plasmodium infection. Two of the five genes also showed expression changes with infection by blood-feeding, indicating that these genes could affect the development of Plasmodium parasites in mosquitoes.
疟原虫在蚊子体内会暴露于各种生理过程中,如血餐消化活动、配子生殖周期和宿主反应,以防止寄生虫进入中肠壁。然而,当在体外培养的卵囊被注入蚊子的血腔时,疟原虫不会受到脊椎动物宿主血液成分的影响,也不会穿过中肠上皮细胞。这种感染方法可能有助于鉴定影响疟原虫在蚊子体内发育的蚊子来源的因素。本研究调查了与按蚊中寄生虫发育相关的新型蚊子来源的分子。我们将体外培养的疟原虫伯氏疟原虫(ANKA 株)卵囊注入雌性和雄性按蚊(STE2 株),发现雄性中的抱子囊数量明显高于雌性,表明雄性蚊子更能支持寄生虫的发育。接下来,对注入的雌性和雄性蚊子进行 RNA-seq 分析,以鉴定表达发生变化的基因。在性别之间具有不同表达模式且表达变化最大的五个基因被鉴定为可能与疟原虫感染相关的基因。这五个基因中的两个也表现出与吸血感染相关的表达变化,表明这些基因可能影响疟原虫在蚊子中的发育。