4.3 Article

Mosquito-Borne Diseases and Omics: Salivary Gland Proteome of the Female Aedes aegypti Mosquito

期刊

OMICS-A JOURNAL OF INTEGRATIVE BIOLOGY
卷 21, 期 1, 页码 45-54

出版社

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/omi.2016.0160

关键词

proteomics; global health; diagnostic medicine; neglected tropical diseases; personalized medicine

资金

  1. Department of Biotechnology (DBT), Government of India
  2. Infosys Foundation
  3. Science and Engineering Research Board (SERB), Government of India [EMR/2014/000444]
  4. Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, Government of India
  5. University Grants Commission, Government of India
  6. DBT Program Support on infrastructure for proteomic data analysis [BT/01/COE/08/05]

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The female Aedes aegypti mosquito is an important vector for several tropical and subtropical diseases such as dengue, chikungunya, and Zika and yellow fever. The disease viruses infect the mosquito and subsequently spread to the salivary glands after which the viruses can be transmitted to humans with probing or feeding by the mosquito. Omics systems sciences offer the opportunity to characterize vectors and can inform disease surveillance, vector control and development of innovative diagnostics, personalized medicines, vaccines, and insecticide targets. Using high-resolution mass spectrometry, we performed an analysis of the A. aegypti salivary gland proteome. The A. aegypti proteome resulted in acquisition of 83,836 spectra. Upon searches against the protein database of the A. aegypti, these spectra were assigned to 5417 unique peptides, belonging to 1208 proteins. To the best of our knowledge, this is the largest set of proteins identified in the A. aegypti salivary gland. Of note, 29 proteins were involved in immunity-related pathways in salivary glands. A subset of these proteins is known to interact with disease viruses. Another 15 proteins with signal cleavage site were found to be secretory in nature, and thus possibly playing critical roles in blood meal ingestion. These findings provide a baseline to advance our understanding of vector-borne diseases and vector-pathogen interactions before virus transmission in global health, and might therefore enable future design and development of virus-blocking strategies and novel molecular targets in the mosquito vector A. aegypti.

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