| Literature DB >> 30200639 |
Olivia L Champion1, Richard W Titball2, Steven Bates3.
Abstract
In the past decade, Galleria mellonella (wax moth) larvae have become widely used as a non-mammalian infection model. However, the full potential of this infection model has yet to be realised, limited by the variable quality of larvae used and the lack of standardised procedures. Here, we review larvae suitable for research, protocols for dosing larvae, and methods for scoring illness in larvae infected with fungal pathogens. The development of standardised protocols for carrying out our experimental work will allow high throughput screens to be developed, changing the way in which we evaluate panels of mutants and strains. It will also enable the in vivo screening of potential antimicrobials at an earlier stage in the research and development cycle.Entities:
Keywords: Galleria mellonella; end point; fungi; genome; infection model; pathological score
Year: 2018 PMID: 30200639 PMCID: PMC6162639 DOI: 10.3390/jof4030108
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Fungi (Basel) ISSN: 2309-608X
Comparison of alternative infection models.
| Model | Whole Animal Model | Use at 37 °C | Precise Dosing | Immune System | Cost of Maintenance by User | Regulated Use in the UK |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monolayer cell cultures | no | yes | yes | no | medium | no |
| 3D cell cultures | no | yes | yes | no | high | no |
| yes | no | no | yes | low | no | |
| yes | yes | no | yes | low | no | |
| Zebra fish (and embryos) | yes | no | yes | yes | high | yes (fish and older embryos) |
| yes | yes | no | yes | low | no | |
|
| yes | yes | yes | yes | low | no |
| yes | yes | yes | yes | low | regulated as a crop pest. |
Figure 1Changes in the appearance of G. mellonella larvae after infection (B) compared to healthy final instar stage larvae (A). Reproduced from [22] with the permission of the authors. Progressive melanisation of larvae is shown from right (none) to left (complete).
The G. mellonella health index scoring system [43].
| Category | Description | Score |
|---|---|---|
| activity | no movement | 0 |
| minimal movement on stimulation | 1 | |
| move when stimulated | 2 | |
| move without stimulation | 3 | |
| cocoon formation | no cocoon | 0 |
| partial cocoon | 0.5 | |
| full cocoon | 1 | |
| melanisation | black larvae | 0 |
| black spots on brown larvae | 1 | |
| ≥3 spots on beige larvae | 2 | |
| <3 spots on beige larvae | 3 | |
| no melanisation | 4 | |
| survival | dead | 0 |
| alive | 2 |
Approaches to standardizing experiments using G. mellonella larvae.
| Model Limitations | Consequences | Solution |
|---|---|---|
| Differences in age, weight and health status of larvae | Lack of reproducibility between experiments | Use age and weight defined larvae |
| Antibiotic and hormone residues | Lack of reproducibility between experiments. May distort the results of tests of antimicrobial efficacy | Use larvae bred without the use of antibiotics or hormones |
| Genetic diversity of | Lack of reproducibility between experiments | Use inbred breeding colony |
| Larvae have a surface flora of pathogenic microorganisms | Deaths in controls when injected with PBS | Surface decontaminate larvae |
| Larvae normally available do not feed | Difficult to dose orally with pathogens or chemicals | Use early instar stage larvae or Oral gavage |
| Scoring or morbidity or mortality can be subjective | End points are not well defined | Use Heath Index Scoring System |
| Dosing involves injection of small volumes | Dose of pathogen given is not precisely determined | Use Hamilton syringes |
| High throughput screening is limited by operator ability to inject large numbers of larvae | Screens are size limited | Reduce cohort size using standardised larvae or Develop automated screens |