Back to Search Start Over

Temperature and density-dependent effects of larval environment on Aedes aegypti competence for an alphavirus

Authors :
Ephantus J. Muturi
Millon Blackshear
Allison Montgomery
Source :
Journal of Vector Ecology. 37:154-161
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Society for Vector Ecology, 2012.

Abstract

Mosquito larvae experience multiple environmental stressors that may modify how subsequent adults interact with pathogens. We evaluated the effect of larval rearing temperature and intraspecific larval competition on adult mosquito immunity and vector competence for Sindbis virus (SINV). Aedes aegypti larvae were reared at two intraspecific densities (150 and 300 larvae) at 20° C and 30° C and the adults were fed artificially on citrated bovine blood containing 10(5) plaque forming units of SINV. Expression of cecropin, defensin, and transferrin was also evaluated in one- and five-day-old female adults. There was a direct relationship between larval density and SINV infection and dissemination rates at low temperature (20° C) and an inverse relationship between larval density and SINV infection rate at high temperature (30° C). Cecropin was only expressed in five-day-old adults that were raised at high temperature as larvae and was 20-fold over-expressed at low compared to high density treatments. Defensin and transferrin were under-expressed in one-day-old adults and over-expressed in five-day-old adults in all competition-temperature combinations relative to low density treatments at 20° C. These findings suggest that interaction between biotic and abiotic conditions of the larval environment may alter adult mosquito immunity resulting in enhanced vector competence for arboviruses.

Details

ISSN :
10811710
Volume :
37
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Vector Ecology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3f946250875a68ad47ea1f1c48f94a10
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1948-7134.2012.00212.x