| Literature DB >> 31238857 |
Jessica L Waite1, Eunho Suh1, Penelope A Lynch2, Matthew B Thomas1.
Abstract
The rate of malaria transmission is strongly determined by parasite development time in the mosquito, known as the extrinsic incubation period (EIP), since the quicker parasites develop, the greater the chance that the vector will survive long enough for the parasite to complete development and be transmitted. EIP is known to be temperature-dependent but this relationship is surprisingly poorly characterized. There is a single degree-day model for EIP of Plasmodium falciparum that derives from a limited number of poorly controlled studies conducted almost a century ago. Here, we show that the established degree-day model greatly underestimates the rate of development of P. falciparum in both Anopheles stephensi and An. gambiae mosquitoes at temperatures in the range of 17-20°C. We also show that realistic daily temperature fluctuation further speeds parasite development. These novel results challenge one of the longest standing models in malaria biology and have potentially important implications for understanding the impacts of future climate change.Entities:
Keywords: climate change; extrinsic incubation period; highlands; malaria risk; parasite infection; pathogen
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31238857 PMCID: PMC6597502 DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2019.0275
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Lett ISSN: 1744-9561 Impact factor: 3.703
Summary of P. falciparum infection across a range of temperatures, showing the number of replicate infectious feeds, the number of mosquitoes dissected to examine for oocysts and sporozoites, the day post-blood-feed when sporozoites were first observed in mosquito salivary glands, and the equivalent EIP predicted by the Detinova degree-day model [9].
| mosquito species and temperature regime (°C) | no. of replicate infectious feeds | dissection days post feed (and total no. mosquitoes dissected for oocysts, and sporozoites) | presence of oocysts (and maximum prevalence on a given day) | presence of sporozoites (and maximum prevalence on a given day) | day sporozoites first detected in salivary glands | EIP (days) predicted by degree-day model |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 16 ± 0 | 3 | 40–62 (50, 92) | no | no | n.a. | infinite |
| 17 ± 0 | 2 | 34–60 (64, 273) | yes (55%) | yes (57%) | 38 | 111 |
| 18 ± 0 | 3 | 16–62 (402, 322) | yes (75%) | yes (73%) | 33 | 56 |
| 20 ± 0 | 1 | 11–39 (148, 114) | yes (80%) | yes (78%) | 26 | 28 |
| 14 ± 5 | 3 | 17–60 (144, 217) | yes (3%) | no | n.a. | infinite |
| 16 ± 5 | 6 | 16–55 (362, 377) | yes (5%) | yes (5%) | 30 | infinite |
| 18 ± 5 | 2 | 15–62 (286, 228) | yes (79%) | yes (85%) | 27 | 56 |
| 17 ± 0 | 2 | 34–50 (107, 273) | yes (13%) | yes (3%) | 43 | 111 |
| 19 ± 0 | 2 | 23–41 (52, 383) | yes (40%) | yes (23%) | 29 | 37 |
| 19 ± 5 | 2 | 18–40 (80, 491) | yes (50%) | yes (33%) | 25 | 37 |
Figure 1.Plot line shows survival of mosquitoes that we assume will become infectious following a parasite-infected blood meal. Areas under the line represent total mosquito days of life, based on empirical data for An. stephensi at (a) 18°C, and (b) 18 ± 5°C. The dashed line bounding the grey area represents estimated EIP, or parasite sporogony, based on observed data at these temperatures. The grey area represents the number of infectious-mosquito-days, which provides a relative measure of force of infection. Within the larger grey area, the hatched shading represents infectious-mosquito-days calculated using the degree-day model of Detinova [9].