Affiliation:
1. Deparment of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan, USA
2. Department of Entomology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Flavobacteria (members of the family
Flavobacteriaceae
) dominate the bacterial community in the
Anopheles
mosquito midgut. One such commensal,
Elizabethkingia anophelis
, is closely associated with
Anopheles
mosquitoes through transstadial persistence (i.e., from one life stage to the next); these and other properties favor its development for paratransgenic applications in control of malaria parasite transmission. However, the physiological requirements of
E. anophelis
have not been investigated, nor has its capacity to perpetuate despite digestion pressure in the gut been quantified. To this end, we first developed techniques for genetic manipulation of
E. anophelis
, including selectable markers, reporter systems (green fluorescent protein [GFP] and NanoLuc), and transposons that function in
E. anophelis
. A flavobacterial expression system based on the promoter P
ompA
was integrated into the
E. anophelis
chromosome and showed strong promoter activity to drive GFP and NanoLuc reporter production. Introduced, GFP-tagged
E. anophelis
associated with mosquitoes at successive developmental stages and propagated in
Anopheles gambiae
and
Anopheles stephensi
but not in
Aedes triseriatus
mosquitoes. Feeding NanoLuc-tagged cells to
A. gambiae
and
A. stephensi
in the larval stage led to infection rates of 71% and 82%, respectively. In contrast, a very low infection rate (3%) was detected in
Aedes triseriatus
mosquitoes under the same conditions. Of the initial
E. anophelis
cells provided to larvae, 23%, 71%, and 85% were digested in
A. stephensi
,
A. gambiae
, and
Aedes triseriatus
, respectively, demonstrating that
E. anophelis
adapted to various mosquito midgut environments differently. Bacterial cell growth increased up to 3-fold when arginine was supplemented in the defined medium. Furthermore, the number of NanoLuc-tagged cells in
A. stephensi
significantly increased when arginine was added to a sugar diet, showing it to be an important amino acid for
E. anophelis
. Animal erythrocytes promoted
E. anophelis
growth
in vivo
and
in vitro
, indicating that this bacterium could obtain nutrients by participating in erythrocyte lysis in the mosquito midgut.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
78 articles.
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