Monitoring Aedes populations for arboviruses, Wolbachia, insecticide resistance and its mechanisms in various agroecosystems in Benin
•The susceptibility of arbovirus vectors to insecticides and the microbiome of Aedes species are understudied in Benin.•Ae. aegypti is an important arbovirus vector and it is infected with Wolbachia spp., in Benin.•Ae. aegypti is resistant to Permethrin and the cause of resistance are the over-expre...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Acta tropica 2024-05, Vol.253, p.107178-107178, Article 107178 |
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Zusammenfassung: | •The susceptibility of arbovirus vectors to insecticides and the microbiome of Aedes species are understudied in Benin.•Ae. aegypti is an important arbovirus vector and it is infected with Wolbachia spp., in Benin.•Ae. aegypti is resistant to Permethrin and the cause of resistance are the over-expression of P450 genes and co-occurrence of two (F1534C + V1016G/I) and three (F1534C + V1016G/I + S989P) different kdr mutations.•Permethrin can be used for vector control where Ae. albopictus is the principal vector.
Aedes mosquitoes are the main vectors of arboviruses in Benin. Cases of dengue have been reported in Benin with all four serotypes of the virus actively circulating in this region. Some agricultural settings are known to harbor Aedes vectors responsible for the transmission of arboviruses. The massive use of certain insecticides in agricultural settings has probably contributed to insecticide resistance in these vectors. In Benin, the susceptibility of arbovirus vectors to insecticides is poorly studied. In addition, the distribution of Wolbachia spp., which is used against some arboviruses is unknown. Moreover, there is limited information regarding the vectors responsible for the transmission of arboviruses in Benin. This present study monitored the species composition, arboviruses, and Wolbachia symbiont status, as well as the phenotypic and molecular insecticide resistance profile of Aedes populations from three agroecosystems in Benin. Aedes species identification was performed morphologically and confirmed using qPCR. (RT)-qPCR assay was applied for monitoring the presence of DENV, CHIKV, ZIKV, and WNV pathogens as well as for naturally occurring Wolbachia symbionts. Insecticide resistance was assessed phenotypically, by permethrin (0.75%) exposure of Adults (F0) using World Health Organization (WHO) bioassay protocols, and at the molecular level, using TaqMan (RT)-qPCR assays for assessing knock-down resistance (kdr) mutations (F1534C, V1016G/I, and S989P) and the expression levels of eight detoxification genes (P450s from the CYP9 and CYP6 families, carboxylesterases and glutathione-S-transferases). Aedes aegypti (Ae. aegypti) mosquitoes were the most abundant (93.9%) in the three agroecosystems studied, followed by Aedes albopictus (Ae. albopictus) mosquitoes (6.1%). No arboviruses were detected in the study's mosquito populations. Naturally occurring Wolbachia symbionts were present in 7 pools out of 15 pools tested. This could influence th |
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ISSN: | 0001-706X 1873-6254 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.actatropica.2024.107178 |