| Literature DB >> 21356077 |
Luciano A Moreira1, Yixin H Ye, Karly Turner, Darryl W Eyles, Elizabeth A McGraw, Scott L O'Neill.
Abstract
Wolbachia is an intracellular bacterium that has been stably transinfected into the mosquito vector of dengue, Aedes aegypti. This inherited infection causes a range of metabolic and phenotypic alterations in the mosquito, which might be related to neuronal abnormalities. In order to determine if these alterations were caused by the manipulation of neuroamines by this bacterium, we studied the expression of genes involved in the dopamine biosynthetic pathway and also measured the amount of dopamine in infected and uninfected mosquitoes of different ages. Wolbachia-infected mosquitoes exhibit greater expression of some genes related to the melanization pathway, but not for those directly linked to dopamine production. Although dopamine levels were higher in Wolbachia-positive mosquitoes this was not consistent across all insect ages nor was it related to the previously described Wolbachia induced "bendy" and "shaky" phenotypes.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21356077 PMCID: PMC3058110 DOI: 10.1186/1756-3305-4-28
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Figure 1Expression analysis of genes involved in the dopamine pathway. (A) Simplified dopamine pathway involving the enzymes phenoloxidase (PO), Tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and DOPA-decarboxylase. (B-F) Quantitative PCR of Ebony, DDC and ppo genes in Wolbachia-infected (Wolb+) and uninfected (Wolb-) A. aegypti mosquito heads of three different ages (5, 15 and 30 days-old) (n = 5 for each time point). *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01 and ***P < 0.001.
Primers used for quantitative PCR analysis of genes related to dopamine metabolism
| Accession | Primer | Sequence 5'-3' | Amplicon (bp) |
|---|---|---|---|
| AAEL004175-RA | Ae-RpS17F | CACTCCCAGGTCCGTGGTAT | 81 |
| Ae-RpS17R | GGACACTTCCGGCACGTAGT | ||
| AAEL014238-RB | Ddc F | GGTGGACTACATCGCCAACT | 166 |
| Ddc R | GACACCAGGCATGATGACAC | ||
| AAEL005793-RA | Ebony F | GAATCGGGACGGAGATTACA | 198 |
| Ebony R | ACGGCCACATTTTCGTAGTC | ||
| AAEL011764-RA | Ppo011764 F | CTGAACAACGGATTCCCATT | 165 |
| Ppo011764 R | TCATCAACGTCTGCACATCA | ||
| AAEL006877-RA | Ppo006877 F | CTATACGGCTTCGGATCGAG | 184 |
| Ppo006877 R | GTACCGAGCCATCGTTTGTT | ||
| AAEL013501-RA | Ppo013501 F | CTTCGGATCGAGAGCTTGAG | 176 |
| Ppo013501 R | GTACCGAGCCATCGTTTGTT | ||
| NC_002978: c537094-538083 | ANK550 F | CAGGAGTTGCTGTGGGTATATTAG | 74 |
| ANK550 R | TGCAGGTAATGCAGTAGCGTAAA |
Figure 2Dopamine levels in mosquito heads. (A-D) Dopamine levels (pg/mosquito head) in Wolbachia infected (+ Wolb) and uninfected A. aegypti mosquitoes (- Wolb) of three different ages (5, 15 and 30 days-old). Sample sizes were as follows with each n = pool of 5 heads; 5 days n = 40, 15 days n = 26, 30 days n = 22-42. On D a replicate experiment is shown. *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01.
Figure 3Dopamine levels in phenotyped mosquitoes. (A) Dopamine levels in 30 days-old Wolbachia-positive mosquitoes exhibiting normal or abnormal behavior ("shaky" or "bendy", see text) (n = number of pools). (B) Normalized Wolbachia density (ankirin gene: RPS17, see text) in individual mosquitoes exhibiting normal or abnormal behavior (n = number of individual females). ***P < 0.0001.