| Literature DB >> 16569221 |
Friedrich Frischknecht1, Beatrice Martin, Isabelle Thiery, Catherine Bourgouin, Robert Menard.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Plasmodium species that infect rodents, particularly Plasmodium berghei and Plasmodium yoelii, are useful to investigate host-parasite interactions. The mosquito species that act as vectors of human plasmodia in South East Asia, Africa and South America show different susceptibilities to infection by rodent Plasmodium species. P. berghei and P. yoelii infect both Anopheles gambiae and Anopheles stephensi, which are found mainly in Africa and Asia, respectively. However, it was reported that P. yoelii can infect the South American mosquito, Anopheles albimanus, while P. berghei cannot.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 16569221 PMCID: PMC1450296 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-5-23
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Figure 1Detecting development of oocysts in Anopheles midguts. (A) Abdomen and dissected midgut of an infected A. stephensi mosquito with green fluorescent P. berghei. Note that single oocysts can be detected in the intact mosquito, while multiple oocysts give a blurred signal. (B) Oocyst derived fluorescence detected in a well infected living A. albimanus mosquito (left) and an isolated midgut (right) 26 days post infection. In the mosquito the fluorescence appears blurred due to the opaque nature of the abdomen's chitin. (C) Four representative photographs from midguts of infected A. albimanus, A. gambiae and A. stephensi mosquitoes. The days after the infectious blood meals are indicated.
Evaluation of infected A. albimanus mosquitoes fed on sucrose solution with or without supplemented PABA and Pen/Strep. In total 14 infections were performed with mosquitoes fed on sugar (3 of these resulted in no infected midguts) and 20 infections with mosquitoes fed on PAPA+Pen/Strep. During each infection between 50 and 250 mosquitoes were investigated. Data shown are mean ± standard deviation.
| Sugar | Sugar with PABA+Pen/Strep | |
| Infected mosquitoes | 3.9 ± 4.3% | 19.2 ± 9.7% |
| % of infected midguts with < 5 oocysts | 80.3 ± 25.3 | 49.5 ± 18.1 |
| % of infected midguts with 5–20 oocysts | 9.1 ± 16.8 | 28.1 ± 14.4 |
| % of infected midguts with 20 – 50 oocysts | 10.6 ± 23.9 | 7.3 ± 7.5 |
| % of infected midguts with > 50 oocysts | 0 | 5.3 ± 9.1 |
| Mosquitoes with sporozoites in the haemolymph but no more oocysts in the midgut | 0 | 9.4 ± 12.3% |
Figure 2In vivo imaging of sporozoites in the haemolymph. (A) Left panel: An A. stephensi mosquito immobilized on a glass-slide for microscopy observation. Note the fluorescent signal at the base of the wings indicating haemolymph sporozoites (arrowhead). Right panel: An enlarged view of an A. stephensi mosquito viewed from the abdominal side indicating the fluorescent signal from sporozoites in the salivary gland (arrow) and from sporozoites in the veins of the wing (arrowhead). (B) Detection of individual sporozoites in the haemolymph. A vein of the wing imaged with a red filter (568 nm excitation) shows the auto-fluorescent mosquito tissue. The same region imaged with 488 nm excitation light shows the specific green fluorescence of the sporozoites (arrows) as well as the auto-fluorescent tissue. See also movie 1. (C) Three time-lapse images taken 3 seconds apart show the passive movement of sporozoites within the haemolymph of the mosquito tibia. The color image represents three images taken 3 seconds apart, pseudo-colored and overlayed to illustrate the movement of the sporozoites (see also movie 2). (D) Unusually many sporozoites (green) in the haemolymph of an A. albimanus thorax at 26 days post infection.
Figure 3Infectious sporozoites in A. albimanus. (A) Isolated salivary gland of an infected A. albimanus mosquito at 26 days post infection. Sporozoites are shown in the left panel, while the movement occurring over 200 seconds is shown in the middle panel. This panel represents the projected standard deviation between time frames of a movie that spans 200 seconds with one image taken every 2 seconds. The insets show a typical back-and-forth moving sporozoite (arrowheads indicate ends of sporozoite). The time between frames is indicated in seconds. The right panel shows a merge of the static sporozoites (green) and the movement (red). See also movie 3. (B) An isolated sporozoite glides on a glass surface in the presence of 5% foetal calf serum. The asterix indicates the apical end of the sporozoites at 0 seconds, while the arrowhead indicates the apical end at the respective time frame. Time between frames is indicated in seconds. Scale bar: 10 μm. (C) Blood smear at 13 days after the injection of 2.000 salivary gland sporozoites shows an early trophozoite.