Author:
Paton Douglas G.,Probst Alexandra S.,Ma Erica,Adams Kelsey L.,Shaw W. Robert,Singh Naresh,Bopp Selina,Volkman Sarah K.,Hien Domombele F. S.,Paré Prislaure S. L.,Yerbanga Rakiswendé S.,Diabaté Abdoullaye,Dabiré Roch K.,Lefèvre Thierry,Wirth Dyann F.,Catteruccia Flaminia
Abstract
The spread of insecticide resistance in Anopheles mosquitoes and drug resistance in Plasmodium parasites is contributing to a global resurgence of malaria, making the generation of control tools that can overcome these roadblocks an urgent public health priority. We recently showed that the transmission of Plasmodium falciparum parasites can be efficiently blocked when exposing Anopheles gambiae females to antimalarials deposited on a treated surface, with no negative consequences on major components of mosquito fitness. Here, we demonstrate this approach can overcome the hurdles of insecticide resistance in mosquitoes and drug resistant in parasites. We show that the transmission-blocking efficacy of mosquito-targeted antimalarials is maintained when field-derived, insecticide resistant Anopheles are exposed to the potent cytochrome b inhibitor atovaquone, demonstrating that this drug escapes insecticide resistance mechanisms that could potentially interfere with its function. Moreover, this approach prevents transmission of field-derived, artemisinin resistant P. falciparum parasites (Kelch13 C580Y mutant), proving that this strategy could be used to prevent the spread of parasite mutations that induce resistance to front-line antimalarials. Atovaquone is also highly effective at limiting parasite development when ingested by mosquitoes in sugar solutions, including in ongoing infections. These data support the use of mosquito-targeted antimalarials as a promising tool to complement and extend the efficacy of current malaria control interventions.
Funder
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
Agence Nationale de la Recherche
National Institutes of Health
Harvard Defeating Malaria Initiative at Harvard University
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Subject
Virology,Genetics,Molecular Biology,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
15 articles.
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