Blood meal-induced inhibition of vector-borne disease by transgenic microbiota
Vector-borne diseases are a substantial portion of the global disease burden; one of the deadliest of these is malaria. Vector control strategies have been hindered by mosquito and pathogen resistances, and population alteration approaches using transgenic mosquitos still have many hurdles to overco...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature communications 2018-10, Vol.9 (1), p.4127-10, Article 4127 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Vector-borne diseases are a substantial portion of the global disease burden; one of the deadliest of these is malaria. Vector control strategies have been hindered by mosquito and pathogen resistances, and population alteration approaches using transgenic mosquitos still have many hurdles to overcome before they can be implemented in the field. Here we report a paratransgenic control strategy in which the microbiota of
Anopheles stephensi
was engineered to produce an antiplasmodial effector causing the mosquito to become refractory to
Plasmodium berghei
. The midgut symbiont
Asaia
was used to conditionally express the antiplasmodial protein scorpine only when a blood meal was present. These blood meal inducible
Asaia
strains significantly inhibit pathogen infection, and display improved fitness compared to strains that constitutively express the antiplasmodial effector. This strategy may allow the antiplasmodial bacterial strains to survive and be transmitted through mosquito populations, creating an easily implemented and enduring vector control strategy.
Vector alteration strategies are emerging as attractive tools for malaria transmission control. Here, Shane et al. engineer a bacterial strain, isolated from mosquitoes, to produce an antiplasmodial protein in the presence of blood meal, causing the mosquitoes to become refractory to
Plasmodium
infection. |
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ISSN: | 2041-1723 2041-1723 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41467-018-06580-9 |