| Literature DB >> 23802619 |
Sreelakshmi K Sreenivasamurthy1, Gourav Dey, Manjula Ramu, Manish Kumar, Manoj K Gupta, Ajeet K Mohanty, H C Harsha, Pushkar Sharma, Nirbhay Kumar, Akhilesh Pandey, Ashwani Kumar, T S Keshava Prasad.
Abstract
Malaria is a vector-borne disease causing extensive morbidity, debility and mortality. Development of resistance to drugs among parasites and to conventional insecticides among vector-mosquitoes necessitates innovative measures to combat this disease. Identification of molecules involved in the maintenance of complex developmental cycles of the parasites within the vector and the host can provide attractive targets to intervene in the disease transmission. In the last decade, several efforts have been made in identifying such molecules involved in mosquito-parasite interactions and, subsequently, validating their role in the development of parasites within the vector. In this study, a list of mosquito proteins, which facilitate or inhibit the development of malaria parasites in the midgut, haemolymph and salivary glands of mosquitoes, is compiled. A total of 94 molecules have been reported and validated for their role in the development of malaria parasites inside the vector. This compendium of molecules will serve as a centralized resource to biomedical researchers investigating vector-pathogen interactions and malaria transmission.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23802619 PMCID: PMC3734095 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-12-216
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Figure 1life-cycle within the mosquito. Ingestion of Plasmodium infected blood by the mosquitoes is followed by reductional division in male and female gametocytes resulting in formation and fusion of male and female gametes within mosquito midgut, to form a zygote. The zygote then develops into an ookinete. The ookinete invades midgut epithelia to reach basal lamina, where it matures into oocyst. The oocysts upon maturation, release hundreds of sporozoites into haemocoel. Sporozoites migrate from midgut to salivary gland through haemolymph and then invade salivary glands. Once inside the salivary gland the sporozoites undergo further modifications and are injected into the host blood stream during a blood meal.
Figure 2Trend of knockdown studies in mosquitoes. There has been an increasing trend towards knockdown studies carried out in mosquitoes recently. The graph shows a 10-fold increase in the use of gene silencing approaches to validate the role of proteins in vector-pathogen interactions.
Figure 3Venn diagram representation of molecules involved in mosquito-interactions at various stages. A total of 78 molecules were validated for their role in the midgut invasion, 22 in melanization and 7 in salivary gland invasion. Among these, SRPN6 and TEP1 were found to be involved in midgut and salivary gland invasion along with melanization of ookinetes. 13 proteins were found to be involved both in the midgut invasion and melanization and 4 molecules were involved in both midgut and salivary gland invasion.
Figure 4Pie-chart representation of molecules that promote or inhibit the transmission and/or development in the vector mosquito. The inner-pie in a lighter shade represents the number of molecules that are facilitating the invasion or transmission of the Plasmodium in mosquito, while the darker outer-pie represents the molecules antagonists to Plasmodium development in mosquito.