| Literature DB >> 30546023 |
Joana Marques1, João C R Cardoso2, Rute C Felix2, Rosa A G Santana3,4, Maria das Graças Barbosa Guerra3,4, Deborah Power2, Henrique Silveira5.
Abstract
Mosquito breeding depends on the supply of fresh vertebrate blood, a major bottleneck for large-scale production of Anopheles spp. Feeding alternatives to fresh blood are thus a priority for research, outdoor large-cage trials and control interventions. Several artificial meal compositions were tested and Anopheles oogenesis, egg laying and development into the next generation of adult mosquitoes were followed. We identified blood-substitute-diets that supported ovarian development, egg maturation and fertility as well as, low progeny larval mortality, and normal development of offspring into adult mosquitoes. The formulated diet is an effective artificial meal, free of fresh blood that mimics a vertebrate blood meal and represents an important advance for the sustainability of Anopheles mosquito rearing in captivity.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30546023 PMCID: PMC6292920 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-35886-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Relative expression of vitellogenin precursor 24 hours post-peptide injection. The results represent the mean ± SE of 3 biological replicates from 3 independent experiments. Relative expression of Vg was determined using the ΔΔCT method using as the control female mosquitoes injected with PBS.
Figure 2Effects of the fresh-blood-free diets on oogenesis. (a) Expression of vitellogenin precursor. Relative expression was determined using the ΔΔCT method as fold change to mosquitoes fed on the i-liq_diet. (b) Percent of mosquito females with eggs. Females were dissected 48 h post-feeding. The results represent the mean ± SE of 3 biological replicates. (c) Oocyte structure. Fluorescent confocal microscopy of oocytes stained with Nile red (lipids stain, red) and Dapi (nuclei stain, blue). Images were acquired with 20x, 40x, and 60x objectives using a Leica TCS SP5 laser scanning confocal microscope. Asterisks indicate statistical significant (P < 0.05) results of an unpaired t test when compared to the blood-fed group (control).
Figure 3Feeding rate. The relative percent of fed and unfed females is indicated. Asterisks indicate groups significantly different (p < 0.05 to p < 0.0001) from the blood-fed control group and § indicates peptide supplemented r-liq groups significantly different (p < 0.0001) from the equivalent peptide enriched i-liq_diet (Fisher’s exact test). Blue: unfed; Salmon, Pale and Vivid Orange and Red: fed.
Egg batches produced by A. coluzzii females.
| Total Egg Number (±SE) | Eggs/Female (±SE) | |
|---|---|---|
| blood | 733 ± 330 | 24 ± 11 |
| r-liq_diet - NoP | 763 ± 164 | 25 ± 5 |
| r-liq_diet + P1 | 774 ± 343 | 26 ± 11 |
| r-liq_diet + P2 | 648 ± 58 | 22 ± 1 |
| r-liq_diet + P3 | 719 ± 82 | 25 ± 2 |
| r-liq_diet + P4 | 492 ± 62 | 16 ± 2 |
| r-liq_diet + P5 | 309 ± 18 | 10 ± 0 |
| r-liq_diet + P6 | 656 ± 57 | 22 ± 2 |
The number of laid eggs was established using a hand-held magnifying glass. For each experimental diet three independent experiments were performed consisting of 30 female mosquitoes each (n = 90/diet). Consult supplementary information for peptide description.
Figure 4Effect of fresh-blood-free meals on mortality and survival. After egg laying, mosquitoes were followed through their life cycle until the last pupae emerged and data was analysed against the percentage of females with eggs. Progeny mortality for (a) Larvae, (b) Pupae and (c) Adults. Offspring’s progeny survival represented as (d) Number of females produced in the different diet groups and (e) Number of males produced in the different diet groups. Three independent experiments were performed, each consisting of 30 mosquitoes per diet (n = 90/diet). Vertical bars represent Standard Error of the mean (SE). No significant differences were observed between the blood-fed group and non-blood fed groups using an unpaired t test.