| Literature DB >> 30470183 |
Anne Geiger1, Imna Malele2, Adly M Abd-Alla3, Flobert Njiokou4.
Abstract
Research on the zoo-anthropophilic blood feeding tsetse flies' biology conducted, by different teams, in laboratory settings and at the level of the ecosystems- where also co-perpetuate African Trypanosoma- has allowed to unveil and characterize key features of tsetse flies' bacterial symbionts on which rely both (a) the perpetuation of the tsetse fly populations and (b) the completion of the developmental program of the African Trypanosoma. Transcriptomic analyses have already provided much information on tsetse fly genes as well as on genes of the fly symbiotic partners Sodalis glossinidius and Wigglesworthia, which account for the successful onset or not of the African Trypanosoma developmental program. In parallel, identification of the non- symbiotic bacterial communities hosted in the tsetse fly gut has recently been initiated: are briefly introduced those bacteria genera and species common to tsetse flies collected from distinct ecosystems, that could be further studied as potential biologicals preventing the onset of the African Trypanosoma developmental program. Finally, future work will need to concentrate on how to render tsetse flies refractory, and the best means to disseminate them in the field in order to establish an overall refractory fly population.Entities:
Keywords: Bacteriome; Trypanosomes; Tsetse flies; Vector control
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30470183 PMCID: PMC6251083 DOI: 10.1186/s12866-018-1281-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Microbiol ISSN: 1471-2180 Impact factor: 3.605
Fig. 1Tsetse fly showing localization of its three symbionts and the trypanosome life cycle into the fly
Fig. 2Summary of the main steps involved in the “refractory fly” strategy to control sleeping sickness. Several steps (such as transcriptomic analyses, identifying of differentially expressed genes, identifying of gut bacteria from field flies) have been performed or are in progress. Similarly, technical aspects (choice of a promoter for an efficient transgene expression in Sodalis, Sodalis transfection into tsetse flies) are being solved