Unraveling dual feeding associated molecular complexity of salivary glands in the mosquito Anopheles culicifacies

Author:

Sharma Punita12,Sharma Swati1,Mishra Ashwani Kumar3,Thomas Tina1,Das De Tanwee1,Rohilla Suman Lata1,Singh Namita2,Pandey Kailash C.1,Valecha Neena1,Dixit Rajnikant1

Affiliation:

1. Host-Parasite Interaction Biology Group, National Institute of Malaria Research, Sector-8, Dwarka, Delhi 110077, India

2. Nano and Biotechnology Department, Guru Jambheshwar University, Hisar, Haryana 125001, India

3. NxGenBio Lifesciences, C-451, Yojna Vihar, Delhi 110092, India

Abstract

ABSTRACT Mosquito salivary glands are well known to facilitate meal acquisition, however the fundamental question on how adult female salivary gland manages molecular responses during sugar versus blood meal uptake remains unanswered. To investigate these responses, we analyzed a total of 58.5 million raw reads generated from two independent RNAseq libraries of the salivary glands collected from 3–4 day-old sugar and blood fed Anopheles culicifacies mosquitoes. Comprehensive functional annotation analysis of 10,931 contigs unraveled that salivary glands may encode diverse nature of proteins in response to distinct physiological feeding status. Digital gene expression analysis and PCR validation indicated that first blood meal significantly alters the molecular architecture of the salivary glands. Comparative microscopic analysis also revealed that first blood meal uptake not only causes an alteration of at least 12–22% of morphological features of the salivary glands but also results in cellular changes e.g. apoptosis, confirming together that adult female salivary glands are specialized organs to manage meal specific responses. Unraveling the underlying mechanism of mosquito salivary gene expression, controlling dual feeding associated responses may provide a new opportunity to control vector borne diseases.

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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