Culturable bacteria associated with Anopheles darlingi and their paratransgenesis potential

Author:

Rocha Elerson Matos,Marinotti Osvaldo,Serrão Deidre Machado,Correa Laura Viana,Katak Ricardo de Melo,de Oliveira Juan Campos,Muniz Veranilce Alves,de Oliveira Marta Rodrigues,do Nascimento Neto Joaquim Ferreira,Pessoa Marcos Cézar Fernandes,Roque Rosemary Aparecida,da Mota Adolfo Jose,Onorati Piero,Souza-Neto Jayme A.,Terenius OlleORCID,Tadei Wanderli Pedro

Abstract

Abstract Background Malaria remains a major public health problem in South America, mostly in the Amazon region. Among newly proposed ways of controlling malaria transmission to humans, paratransgenesis is a promising alternative. Paratransgenesis aims to inhibit the development of parasites within the vector through the action of genetically modified bacteria. The first step towards successful paratransgenesis in the Amazon is the identification of Anopheles darlingi symbiotic bacteria, which are transmitted vertically among mosquitoes, and are not pathogenic to humans. Methods Culturable bacteria associated with An. darlingi and their breeding sites were isolated by conventional microbiological techniques. Isolated strains were transformed with a GFP expressing plasmid, pSPT-1-GFP, and reintroduced in mosquitoes by feeding. Their survival and persistence in the next generation was assessed by the isolation of fluorescent bacteria from eggs, larvae, pupae and adult homogenates. Results A total of 179 bacterial strains were isolated from samples from two locations, Coari and Manaus. The predominant genera identified in this study were Acinetobacter, Enterobacter, Klebsiella, Serratia, Bacillus, Elizabethkingia, Stenotrophomonas and Pantoea. Two isolated strains, Serratia-Adu40 and Pantoea-Ovo3, were successfully transformed with the pSPT-1-GFP plasmid and expressed GFP. The fluorescent bacteria fed to adult females were transferred to their eggs, which persisted in larvae and throughout metamorphosis, and were detected in adult mosquitoes of the next generation. Conclusion Serratia-Adu40 and Pantoea-Ovo3 are promising candidates for paratransgenesis in An. darlingi. Further research is needed to determine if these bacteria are vertically transferred in nature.

Funder

Swedish Research Council

Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior

Pró-Amazônia: Biodiversidade e Sustentabilidade

Programa de Apoio à Fixação de Doutores no Amazonas - FIXAM / FAPEAM

Uppsala University

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Parasitology

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