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首页> 外文期刊>Journal of Insect Physiology >Male contributions during mating increase female survival in the disease vector mosquito Aedes aegypti
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Male contributions during mating increase female survival in the disease vector mosquito Aedes aegypti

机译:在交配过程中的男性贡献增加了疾病的女性生存蚊子蚊子AEGYPTI

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Aedes aegypti is a vector of medically important viruses including those causing Zika, dengue, and chikungunya. During mating, males transfer a number of proteins and other molecules to the female and these components of the male ejaculate are essential in shifting female post-mating behaviors in a number of insect species. Because these molecules are highly variable by species, and female post-mating behavior by species is also varied, behavioral assays testing the function of the ejaculate are necessary before we can develop control strategies targeting the mating system to reduce mosquito populations. Because increased survival in mosquitoes strongly increases vectorial capacity and can influence population sizes and potential risk we tested the effect of mating on female survival. The ejaculate can either promote or reduce female survival, as both have been shown in multiple insect species, yet this effect has not been directly assessed in mosquitoes. We compared survival of females in four treatment groups: mated females, virgin females, and virgin females injected with either an extract from the male reproductive glands or a saline control. Survival, blood feeding frequency, fecundity and cumulative net reproductive rate (R-0) were determined after multiple feedings from a human host. Our results confirm that male reproductive gland substances increase female fecundity and blood feeding frequency, resulting in dramatic increases in fitness (R-0). We also demonstrate, for the first time, an effect of male reproductive gland extracts alone on female survival, regardless of whether or not the female ingested a vertebrate blood meal. Thus, the effects of MAG extract on survival are not secondary effects from altered blood feeding. Collectively, we demonstrate a direct role for Ae. aegypti male-derived molecules on increasing female fitness, reproductive success and, ultimately, transmission potential for vector borne pathogens.
机译:AEDES AEGYPTI是医学上重要病毒的矢量,包括导致ZIKA,登革热和Chikungunya的病毒。在交配期间,雄性转移许多蛋白质和其他分子到雌性,并且这些雄性射精的这些组分对于在许多昆虫物种中移位雌性后交配行为是必不可少的。因为这些分子通过物种具有高度变化,并且由于物种的雌性交配行为也是多样化的,因此在我们开发瞄准配合系统以减少蚊子群体的控制策略之前,需要进行射精功能的行为测定。由于蚊子的生存增加强烈增加了矢量容量,并且可以影响人口尺寸和潜在风险,我们测试了交配对女性生存的影响。射精可以促进或减少女性存活,因为两者都以多种昆虫物种显示,但这种效果尚未在蚊子中直接评估。我们将女性的生存在四个治疗组中:配合女性,处女女性和初学者女性,注入来自雄性生殖腺或盐水的提取物。在人宿主的多种喂食后测定存活率,血液喂养频率,繁殖量和累积净生殖率(R-0)。我们的结果证实,雄性生殖腺物质增加了女性繁殖力和血液喂养频率,导致健身(R-0)的剧烈增加。我们也首次证明了男性生殖腺萃取物对女性生存的影响,无论女性是否摄取脊椎动物粉末。因此,MAG提取物对存活下的影响不是改变血液的二次效应。统称,我们展示了AE的直接作用。 Aegypti男性衍生的分子提高女性健身,生殖成功,最终,传播潜力对载体的病原体。

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