AI Article Synopsis

  • Maternal factors, such as food availability and infection, significantly influence the development and survival of A. gambiae mosquitoes' offspring.
  • Offspring from infected mothers develop more slowly, especially under low food conditions, but maternal food did not impact offspring survival until emergence.
  • Interestingly, while low food increases resistance to malaria in offspring, maternal infection decreases the likelihood of offspring harboring malaria parasites, suggesting a potential for using V. culicis in malaria control efforts.

Article Abstract

Background: It is becoming generally recognized that an individual's phenotype can be shaped not only by its own genotype and environmental experience, but also by its mother's environment and condition. Maternal environmental factors can influence mosquitoes' population dynamics and susceptibility to malaria, and therefore directly and indirectly the epidemiology of malaria.

Methods: In a full factorial experiment, the effects of two environmental stressors - food availability and infection with the microsporidian parasite Vavraia culicis - of female mosquitoes (Anopheles gambiae sensu stricto) on their offspring's development, survival and susceptibility to malaria were studied.

Results: The offspring of A. gambiae s.s. mothers infected with V. culicis developed into adults more slowly than those of uninfected mothers. This effect was exacerbated when mothers were reared on low food. Maternal food availability had no effect on the survival of their offspring up to emergence, and microsporidian infection decreased survival only slightly. Low food availability for mothers increased and V. culicis-infection of mothers decreased the likelihood that the offspring fed on malaria-infected blood harboured malaria parasites (but neither maternal treatment influenced their survival up to dissection).

Conclusions: Resource availability and infection with V. culicis of A. gambiae s.s. mosquitoes not only acted as direct environmental stimuli for changes in the success of one generation, but could also lead to maternal effects. Maternal V. culicis infection could make offspring more resistant and less likely to transmit malaria, thus enhancing the efficacy of the microsporidian for the biological control of malaria.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3269443PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-10-382DOI Listing

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