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Plasticity in malaria parasite development: mosquito resources influence vector-to-host transmission potential

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DataCite Commons2024-10-23 更新2025-04-17 收录
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https://datashare.ed.ac.uk/handle/10283/8883
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Parasites rely on exploiting resources from their hosts and vectors for survival and transmission. This includes nutritional resources, which vary in availability between different hosts and changes during infections. For malaria (Plasmodium) parasites, sexual reproduction (sporogony) and subsequent development of oocysts, which produce sporozoites infectious to the vertebrate host, occurs in the mosquito vector. Mosquitoes in the field exhibit diversity in the amount and type of food they acquire, directly impacting the nutrients available for the replication and development of parasites. While the rate of parasite transmission from vector to host is influenced by the nutritional state of mosquitoes, whether this is due to resource limitation mediating parasite development and productivity is poorly understood. We use the rodent model parasite P. chabaudi and the vector Anopheles stephensi to ask how variation in the amount of sugar and blood provided to malaria-infected mosquitoes affects parasite transmission potential. We show that parasites in well-resourced mosquitoes grow faster and have a 1.7-fold higher sporozoite burden those whose vectors only receive sugar. However, this increase in productivity is only partly explained by oocyst development, suggesting that resource availability also impacts the ability of sporozoites to reach the salivary glands. As well as challenging the assumption of a simple relationship between the number or size of oocysts and transmission, our findings suggest malaria parasites may actively adjust within-vector development to best exploit nutritional resources; while parasites in low-resourced mosquitoes exhibited a reduction in oocyst burden during sporogony, the remaining oocysts developed more rapidly, reaching a similar size to those in well-resourced mosquitoes. Understanding the impacts of resource availability for malaria transmission is urgent given that parasites encounter increasingly variable vectors as consequences of climate change and vector control tools.
提供机构:
University of Edinburgh. School of Biological Sciences
创建时间:
2024-10-23
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