Affiliation:
1. Department of Tropical Medicine
2. Department of Genetics, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio
3. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Tulane University, New Orleans, Louisiana
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Vaccines that induce mosquito-killing (mosquitocidal) activity could substantially reduce the transmission of certain mosquito-borne diseases, especially vaccines against African malaria vectors, such as the mosquito
Anopheles gambiae
. To generate and characterize antimosquito immunity we immunized groups of mice with two individual
A. gambiae
midgut cDNAs,
Ag-Aper1
(a secreted peritrophic matrix protein) and
AgMuc1
(a midgut-bound mucin), and an
A. gambiae
midgut cDNA library from blood-fed mosquitoes. We observed significantly increased mortality among mosquitoes that fed on either the
AgMuc1
- or the cDNA library-immunized mice compared to that of controls, but no differences were observed among those fed on
Ag-Aper1
-immunized mice. Analysis of the humoral and cellular immune responses from mice showed that the induced mosquitocidal effect was associated with immune profiles characterized by elevated tumor necrosis factor alpha and gamma interferon cytokine levels and very low antibody titers. Furthermore, an additional immunization of cDNA library-immunized mice with midgut protein shifted immunity toward a Th2-type immune response, characterized by elevated antibody titers and high interleukin-5 and interleukin-10 cytokine levels; importantly, mosquitoes feeding on these mice exhibited no undo mortality. Finally, when immune sera was ingested by mosquitoes through a membrane feeder, no effect on mosquito mortality was observed, indicating that serum factors alone were not responsible for the mosquitocidal effect. Our results demonstrate that mosquitocidal immunity in mice can be consistently generated by midgut cDNA immunization and suggest this cDNA-induced mosquitocidal immunity is cell mediated.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
21 articles.
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