4.5 Article

Mathematical modelling of the interactive dynamics of wild and Microsporidia MB-infected mosquitoes

Journal

MATHEMATICAL BIOSCIENCES AND ENGINEERING
Volume 20, Issue 8, Pages 15167-15200

Publisher

AMER INST MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES-AIMS
DOI: 10.3934/mbe.2023679

Keywords

Microsporidia MB; Plasmodium transmission-blocking; vertical-horizontal transmission; compartmental modelling; seasonality; malaria bio-control

Ask authors/readers for more resources

A recent discovery found that mosquitoes infected with Microsporidia MB cannot transmit Plasmodium to humans. This study proposes a compartmental model to understand the prevalence of MB-infected mosquitoes and shows that the low prevalence of MB-infected mosquitoes can be explained by the contribution of male-to-female horizontal transmission. Furthermore, the model identifies the parameters that have the greatest influence on the ratio of MB-positive to wild mosquitoes.
A recent discovery highlighted that mosquitoes infected with Microsporidia MB are unable to transmit the Plasmodium to humans. Microsporidia MB is a symbiont transmitted vertically and horizontally in the mosquito population, and these transmission routes are known to favor the persistence of the parasite in the mosquito population. Despite the dual transmission, data from field experiments reveal a low prevalence of MB-infected mosquitoes in nature. This study proposes a compartmental model to understand the prevalence of MB-infected mosquitoes. The dynamic of the model is obtained through the computation of the basic reproduction number and the analysis of the stability of the MB-free and coexistence equilibria. The model shows that, in spite of the high vertical transmission efficiency of Microsporidia MB, there can still be a low prevalence of MB-infected mosquitoes. Numerical analysis of the model shows that male-to-female horizontal transmission contributes more than female-to-male horizontal transmission to the spread of MB-infected mosquitoes. Moreover, the female-to-male horizontal transmission contributes to the spread of the symbiont only if there are multiple mating occurrences for male mosquitoes. Furthermore, when fixing the efficiencies of vertical transmission, the parameters having the greater influence on the ratio of MB-positive to wild mosquitoes are identified. In addition, by assuming a similar impact of the temperature on wild and MB-infected mosquitoes, our model shows the seasonal fluctuation of MB-infected mosquitoes. This study serves as a reference for further studies, on the release strategies of MB-infected mosquitoes, to avoid overestimating the MB-infection spread.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available