Activation of the G protein‐coupled sulfakinin receptor inhibits blood meal intake in the mosquito Aedes aegypti

Author:

Jiang Linlong12,Xie Xiao Bing3,Zhang Lei124,Tang Yu12,Zhu Xiaojing12,Huang Yuqi12,Hong Yue2,Hansson Bill S.5ORCID,Cui Zong Jie3ORCID,Han Qian124ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Tropical Veterinary Medicine and Vector Biology, School of Life Sciences Hainan University Haikou Hainan China

2. Hainan Province Key Laboratory of One Health Collaborative Innovation Center of One Health Hainan University Haikou Hainan China

3. College of Life Sciences Beijing Normal University Beijing China

4. Hainan International One Health Institute Hainan University Haikou Hainan China

5. Department of Evolutionary Neuroethology Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology Jena Germany

Abstract

AbstractLittle is known about the blood‐feeding physiology of arbovirus vector Aedes aegypti although this type of mosquito is known to transmit infectious diseases dengue, Zika, yellow fever, and chikungunya. Blood feeding in the female A. aegypti mosquito is essential for egg maturation and for transmission of disease agents between human subjects. Here, we identify the A. aegypti sulfakinin receptor gene SKR from the A. aegypti genome and show that SKR is expressed at different developmental stages and in varied anatomical localizations in the adult mosquito (at three days after eclosion), with particularly high expression in the CNS. Knockingdown sulfakinin and sulfakinin receptor gene expression in the female A. aegypti results in increased blood meal intake, but microinjection in the thorax of the sulfakinin peptide 1 and 2 both inhibits dose dependently blood meal intake (and delays the time course of blood intake), which is reversible with receptor antagonist. Sulfakinin receptor expressed ectopically in mammalian cells CHO‐K1 responds to sulfakinin stimulation with persistent calcium spikes, blockable with receptor antagonist. These data together suggest that activation of the Gq protein‐coupled (i.e., calcium‐mobilizing) sulfakinin receptor inhibits blood meal intake in female A. aegypti mosquitoes and could serve as a strategic node for the future control of A. aegypti mosquito reproduction/population and disease transmission.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

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