Last Updated: 18/06/2024

Mechanisms by which malaria parasites manipulate mosquito behaviour to enhance transmission

Objectives

The aim of the project is to demonstarte the mechanisms by which mosquitoes show greater attraction to humans infected with malaria parasites, and especially those carrying the stages capable of transmission to mosquitoes (gametocytes). It also will demonstrate why infective mosquitoes (carrying-sporozoites) behave more aggressively towards the human host.

Principal Institution

Stockholm University (SU), Sweden

Principal Investigators / Focal Persons

Noushin Emami

Rationale and Abstract

The hypothesis to be tested, supported by preliminary data, is that increased attraction and stimulation of blood-feeding in mosquitoes is a result of a metabolite, (E)-4-Hydroxy-3-methyl-but-2-enyl pyrophosphate (HMBPP), produced by parasites from the non-mevalonate pathway, which is absent in humans and mosquitoes. The research will involve (i) identification of gametocytes-metabolites using mass-spectrometry ; (ii)  transcriptional-analyses of infected and infective mosquito ; (iii) behavioural studies on attraction to blood in a wind tunnel ; (iv) phagostimulation-analysis of mosquitoes offered gametocyte-metabolites ; (v) analysis of volatiles released from erythrocytes in response to gametocyte metabolites, that may mediate the behavioural changes, using gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC-MS) ; (vi) quantification of the volatiles released from breath vs. skin of gametocyte-carriers. The project findings will have practical use in understanding what makes mosquitoes preferentially bite infected individuals, become infected and transmit disease, and could lead to novel mosquito “lures” for traps. Overall the benefit would be reduced transmission of malaria in communities, with putative great impact on morbidity.

Date

Jan 2018 — Dec 2021

Total Project Funding

$730,092

Funding Details
Swedish Research Council (SRC), Sweden

Grant ID: 2017-01229_VR
SEK 6M
Project Site

Sweden

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