4.6 Article

Small mosquitoes, large implications: crowding and starvation affects gene expression and nutrient accumulation in Aedes aegypti

期刊

PARASITES & VECTORS
卷 8, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13071-015-0863-9

关键词

Aedes aegypti; fat body; RNAseq; Nutrition; Transcriptome; Metabolome; Immunity; Starvation

资金

  1. National Institute of Health [1SC1A\109055-01]
  2. National Institute of General Medical Sciences [5P20GM103451-12]

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Background: Environmental factors such as temperature, nutrient availability, and larval density determine the outcome of postembryonic development in mosquitoes. Suboptimal temperatures, crowding, and starvation during the larval phase reduce adult mosquito size, nutrient stores and affect vectorial capacity. Methods: In this study we compared adult female Aedes aegypti, Rockefeller strain, raised under standard laboratory conditions (Large) with those raised under crowded and nutritionally deprived conditions (Small). To compare the gene expression and nutritional state of the major energy storage and metabolic organ, the fat body, we performed transcriptomics using Illumina based RNA-seq and metabolomics using GC/MS on females before and 24 hours following blood feeding. Results: Analysis of fat body gene expression between the experimental groups revealed a large number of significantly differentially expressed genes. Transcripts related to immunity, reproduction, autophagy, several metabolic pathways; including amino acid degradation and metabolism; and membrane transport were differentially expressed. Metabolite profiling identified 60 metabolites within the fat body to be significantly affected between small and large mosquitoes, with the majority of detected free amino acids at a higher level in small mosquitoes compared to large. Conclusions: Gene expression and metabolites in the adult fat body reflect the individual post embryonic developmental history of a mosquito larva. These changes affect nutritional storage and utilization, immunity and reproduction. Therefore, it is apparent that changes in larval environment due to weather conditions, nutrition availability, vector control efforts, and other factors can affect adult vectorial capacity in the field.

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