Interkingdom interactions shape the fungal microbiome of mosquitoes

Author:

Hegde Shivanand1,Khanipov Kamil2,Hornett Emily A3,Nilyanimit Pornjarim4,Pimenova Maria2,Saldaña Miguel A5,de Becker Charissa6,Golovko Georgiy7,Hughes Grant L8

Affiliation:

1. Keele University

2. University of Texas Medical Branch

3. University of Liverpool

4. Chulalongkorn University

5. Baylor College of Medicine

6. Utrecht University

7. The University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston

8. Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine

Abstract

Abstract Background The mosquito microbiome is an important modulator of vector competence and vectoral capacity. Unlike the extensively studied bacterial microbiome, fungal communities in the mosquito microbiome (mycobiome) remain largely unexplored. To work towards getting an improved understanding of the fungi associated with mosquitoes, we sequenced the mycobiome of three field-collected and laboratory-reared mosquito species (Aedes albopictus, Aedes aegypti, and Culex quinquefasciatus). Results Our analysis showed both environment and host species were contributing to the diversity of the fungal microbiome of mosquitoes. When comparing species, Ae. albopictus possessed a higher number of diverse fungal taxa than Cx. quinquefasciatus, while strikingly less than 1% of reads from Ae. aegypti samples were fungal. Fungal reads from Ae. aegypti were < 1% even after inhibiting host amplification using a PNA blocker, indicating that this species lacked a significant fungal microbiome that was amplified using this sequencing approach. Using a mono-association mosquito infection model, we confirmed that mosquito-derived fungal isolates colonize and for Aedes mosquitoes, support growth and development at comparable rates to their bacterial counterparts. Strikingly, native bacterial taxa isolated from mosquitoes impeded the colonization of symbiotic fungi in Ae. aegypti suggesting interkingdom interactions shape fungal microbiome communities. Conclusion Collectively, this study adds to our understanding of the fungal microbiome of different mosquito species, that these fungal microbes support growth and development, and highlights that microbial interactions underpin fungal colonization of these medically relevent species.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference57 articles.

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