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1.
Olfaction plays an important role in the host-seeking behavior of the malaria mosquito Anopheles gambiae. After a complete blood meal, female mosquitoes will not engage in host-seeking behavior until oviposition has occurred. We investigated if peripheral olfactory sensitivity changed after a blood meal by recording electroantennograms (EAGs) of female mosquitoes at three time points (2 h, 48 h and 72 h) to 15 volatile kairomones of either human origin or documented to emanate from oviposition sites. The EAG-sensitivity was compared with that of females of similar age post eclosion. As is common practice in electrophysiological studies, the EAG recordings were obtained by repeated stimulation of the same antennal preparations. We introduce mixed linear modeling as an improved statistical analysis for electrophysiological data. Two hours after blood ingestion, olfactory sensitivity as quantified through EAG-recording increased significantly and selectively, i.e. for seven compounds, compared to unfed females of the same age. Such short-term electrophysiological sensitization in the olfactory system as a result of feeding has not been documented before for insects. Sensitization to six compounds persisted until 48 h or 72 h post-blood meal at one or more concentrations. Desensitization was observed at 48 and 72 h pbm in response to two and three kairomones, respectively. For several compounds, sensitization at the EAG-level corresponded with sensitization found previously in single sensillum studies on olfactory neurons in antennal sensilla trichodea of An. gambiae females. These effects are likely to reflect sensitization to oviposition cues, as eggs have matured 48–72 h pbm. Knowledge of changes in olfactory sensitivity to kairomones can be applied to increase trap catches of malaria mosquitoes that have taken a blood meal and need to locate oviposition sites.  相似文献   

2.
The inhibition of host-seeking behaviour that accompanies vitellogenesis in the mosquito, Aedes aegypti, was examined by the removal and implantation of ovaries. Mosquitoes ovariectomized before a blood meal and between 1 and 6 hr after a blood meal responded to a host at 48 hr after a blood meal. However, when ovariectomy was delayed until 10 hr after the meal or later, most mosquitoes did not respond to the host. When a partial ovary was present for only the first 12 hr after a meal, there was no host-seeking inhibition at 48 hr, and only 58% of females with one complete ovary present during this time interval responded. Howver, these same amounts of ovarian tissue inhibited host-seeking when they remained for 48 hr after a meal. Vitellogenic ovaries from donors blood-fed 8–24 hr before, implanted into sugar-fed recipients, did not affect the host-seeking behaviour of these recipients. Ovaries removed and reimplanted before the blood meal inhibited host-seeking at 72 hr after the blood meal only in the absence of oviposition from intact ovaries. It is concluded that 2 humoral factors are involved in the promotion of host-seeking inhibition: the first factor is produced by the ovaries, and after reaching a critical threshold in the haemolymph, stimulates the release of a second factor that acts directly to inhibit mosquito behaviour. An ovary which retains 2 or fewer eggs after oviposition terminates the inhibition via nervous pathways. The role of 20-hydroxyecdysone in the behavioural inhibition is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Following a blood meal that initiates oöcyte development, the host-seeking behaviour of Aedes aegypti mosquitoes is inhibited by a haemolymph-borne factor that is released in response to a humoral signal from a vitellogenic ovary. This inhibition is accompanied by a decrease in the sensitivity of the peripheral lactic acid receptors. Implantation of corpora allata, medial neurosecretory cells, or terminal abdominal ganglia from blood-fed donors could not induce the inhibition in sugar-fed recipients. However, fat body transplanted from blood-fed into sugar-fed females suppressed host-seeking behaviour as well as the sensitivity of lactic acid receptors, suggesting that the source of the behavioural inhibitor is the fat body. Resting-stage ovaries from other mosquito species inhibited host-seeking after the A. aegypti host was fed on blood only if the fat body was activated by the donor ovary.  相似文献   

4.
In female Aedes aegypti L. mosquitoes, a blood meal induces physiological and behavioral changes. Previous studies have shown that olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs) housed in grooved peg sensilla on the antennae of Ae. aegypti down-regulate their sensitivity to lactic acid, a key component driving host-seeking behavior, which correlates with observed changes in the host-seeking behavior of this species. In the present study, we performed electrophysiological recordings from the most abundant antennal sensillum type, sensilla trichodea. Our results indicate that the response spectra of ORNs contained within most trichoid sensilla do not change in response to blood feeding. However, we observe an increase in sensitivity to primarily indole and phenolic compounds in neurons housed within four of the five functional types of short blunt tipped II trichoid sensilla, both at 24 and 72 h post-blood feeding, which was more pronounced at 24 h than 72 h. Furthermore, sensitivity to undecanone, acetic acid and propionic acid was observed to increase 72 h post-blood meal. Considering the timing of these changes, we believe that these neurons may be involved in driving the orientation behavior of female mosquitoes to oviposition sites, which are known to release these compounds.  相似文献   

5.
The failure of Aedes aegypti females to engage in host-seeking behaviour following a replete blood meal was investigated. Abdominal distention appears to be responsible for this immediate inhibition after feeding. Large enemas of saline had the same effect as blood in terminating host-seeking; this was not due merely to the presence of large amounts of fluid, but rather to the distention produced by these liquids. Since transection of the ventral nerve cord anterior to the 2nd abdominal ganglion did not release the inhibition in blood-fed females, we restricted the degree of distention of abdominal segments with wax. Distention of the abdomen anteriorly by a blood meal more effectively inhibited host-seeking than did distention posteriorly, suggesting that stretch receptors in the anterior portion of the abdomen regulate the response towards a host.  相似文献   

6.
Female Aedes aegypti mosquitoes were given 1 μl blood enemas, and their subsequent host-seeking behaviour determined in an olfactometer. Those females failing to develop eggs consistently responded to a host stimulus whenever tested, but inseminated mosquitoes developing eggs were inhibited from host-seeking during the period of egg development. Gravid uninseminated mosquitoes were also inhibited, but not to the same degree as inseminated mosquitoes. Experiments involving surgical manipulations and haemolymph transfusions indicate that a haemolymph-borne substance, present during egg development, inhibits the response toward a host.  相似文献   

7.
Juvenile hormone regulation of the second biting cycle was studied in Culex pipiens by allatectomizing mosquitoes at daily intervals after the first blood meal. Mosquitoes oviposited and were tested for biting 2 days later. Allatectomy on days 1 through 4 prevented biting in a high percentage of females, indicating that juvenile hormone was required for a second biting cycle. When allatectomy was delayed 6 or more days after the first blood meal, the mosquitoes took a second blood meal after oviposition even though eggs were retained at the time of allatectomy. Thus, egg retention did not prevent mosquitoes from releasing juvenile hormone for a second biting cycle. Unoperated mosquitoes also bit when they were forced to retain eggs after the first blood meal. However, these mosquitoes only fed on blood if they were confined on or near the host; they would not feed in cages where host seeking was required to locate the host. Based on these findings, it appeared that oviposition was necessary to initiate host-seeking behaviour, whereas juvenile hormone release initiated biting. These results, in conjunction with earlier work demonstrating juvenile hormone induction of the first biting cycle, indicated that alternating periods of juvenile hormone production and oviposition regulate the cyclic patterns of biting and host-seeking behaviour throughout the life of the mosquito.  相似文献   

8.
Electrophysiological studies on female An. gambiae s.s. mosquitoes revealed a receptor neuron within a subpopulation of the antennal grooved-peg sensilla sensitive to the odour of incubated sweat, but not responding to fresh sweat. This receptor neuron was sensitive to ammonia as well, a sweat-borne component which attracts female An. gambiae in a windtunnel bioassay. Neurons innervating a different subpopulation of grooved-peg sensilla did not show a response to incubated sweat. In the latter sensilla, however, one type of neuron responded to water or water containing solutions, while another receptor neuron was inhibited when stimulated with dry air, ether or ethanol. Neurons innervating sensilla trichodea, a more abundant antennal type of olfactory sensillum, did not respond to fresh or incubated sweat at the doses offered. However, receptor neurons within the sensilla trichodea responded with excitation to several sweat-borne components. A subpopulation of the sensilla trichodea was innervated by neurons sensitive to geranyl acetone. A second subpopulation housed receptor neurons sensitive to indole. 3-Methyl-1-butanol and 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one evoked excitation of receptor neurons within both subpopulations of sensilla trichodea. Neurons were most sensitive to indole and geranyl acetone with a threshold of 0.01%. These findings are discussed in the context of host-seeking behaviour.  相似文献   

9.
A dual port olfactometer was used to study the response of Anopheles gambiae Giles sensu stricto to odours of human and animal origin. Human odour consisted of human skin emanations collected on a nylon stocking, which was worn for 24 h. This was tested alone or together with 4.5% carbon dioxide, the concentration in human and cattle breath. Cattle odours consisted of cow skin emanations and/or carbon dioxide. Cow skin emanations were collected by tying a nylon stocking ('cow sock') around the hind leg of a cow for 12 h. Anopheles gambiae s.s. was consistently highly attracted by human odour, which is consistent with the high degree of anthropophily in this mosquito. Anopheles gambiae s.s. was not attracted by human or cattle equivalent volumes of carbon dioxide and this gas did not enhance the effect of human skin residues. Furthermore, A. gambiae s.s. showed a high degree of aversion to cow odour. When human odour and cow odour were tested together in the same port, mosquitoes were still highly attracted, indicating that whilst cattle odour may deter A. gambiae s.s., these mosquitoes can detect human odour in the presence of cattle odour. It was concluded that carbon dioxide plays a minor role in the host seeking behaviour of A. gambiae s.s., whilst host specific cues such as human skin residues play a major role and very effectively demonstrated anthropophilic behaviour in the laboratory.  相似文献   

10.
Behavioural and electrophysiological responses of Anopheles gambiae Giles sensu stricto (Diptera: Culicidae) to human skin emanations collected on glass beads were studied using a dual-port olfactometer and electroantannography. Glass beads to which skin emanations from human hands had been transferred elicited a level of attraction similar to a human hand. The attractiveness of these handled glass beads faded away 4 h after transfer onto the beads. Storage at -20 degrees C for up to 8 weeks showed a decreased but still attractive effect of the beads. In a choice test between one individual and four others, the emanations from the reference individual were significantly more attractive in three out of four cases. The headspace of handled glass beads elicited a dose-dependent EAG response. The substances causing EAG activity could be removed partially by dichloromethane, ethanol and pentane-ether. Glass beads provide a suitable neutral substrate for the transfer of human odour to enable chemical analysis of the human skin emanations for identification of kairomones of anthropophilic mosquitoes.  相似文献   

11.

Background

Female Aedes aegypti mosquitoes are the principal vector for dengue fever, causing 50–100 million infections per year, transmitted between human and mosquito by blood feeding. Ae. aegypti host-seeking behavior is known to be inhibited for three days following a blood meal by a hemolymph-borne humoral factor. Head Peptide-I is a candidate peptide mediating this suppression, but the mechanism by which this peptide alters mosquito behavior and the receptor through which it signals are unknown.

Methodology/Principal Findings

Head Peptide-I shows sequence similarity to short Neuropeptide-F peptides (sNPFs) that have been implicated in feeding behaviors and are known to signal through Neuropeptide Y (NPY)-Like Receptors (NPYLRs). We identified eight NPYLRs in the Ae. aegypti genome and screened each in a cell-based calcium imaging assay for sensitivity against a panel of peptides. Four of the Ae. aegypti NPYLRs responded to one or more peptide ligands, but only NYPLR1 responded to Head Peptide-I as well as sNPFs. Two NPYLR1 homologues identified in the genome of the Lyme disease vector, Ixodes scapularis, were also sensitive to Head Peptide-I. Injection of synthetic Head Peptide-I and sNPF-3 inhibited host-seeking behavior in non-blood-fed female mosquitoes, whereas control injections of buffer or inactive Head Peptide-I [Cys10] had no effect. To ask if NPYLR1 is necessary for blood-feeding-induced host-seeking inhibition, we used zinc-finger nucleases to generate five independent npylr1 null mutant strains and tested them for behavioral abnormalities. npylr1 mutants displayed normal behavior in locomotion, egg laying, sugar feeding, blood feeding, host seeking, and inhibition of host seeking after a blood meal.

Conclusions

In this work we deorphanized four Ae. aegypti NPYLRs and identified NPYLR1 as a candidate sNPF receptor that is also sensitive to Head Peptide-I. Yet npylr1 alone is not required for host-seeking inhibition and we conclude that other receptors, additional peptides, or both, regulate this important behavior.  相似文献   

12.
Abstract. The impact of nutritional variables on the development of host-seeking and biting behaviours after emergence by female Culex nigripalpus mosquitoes were studied using air-flow olfactometer and close-range biting assays, respectively. Unfed females failed to develop resting stage ovarian follicles. When offered a bird host in the absence of competing stimuli, sugar-fed mosquitoes were significantly more responsive in both host-seeking and biting than unfed controls. In a choice olfactometer assay using nectar odours (honey scented with artificial apple-blossom oil) versus host odours (a bird), unfed females preferred honey over bird odours except when honey odour was weak. After sucrose feeding, females switched from honey to bird preference. This change in behaviour was accompanied by significant accumulation of lipid and by follicular growth to the resting stage. Elevation of host responsiveness after sugar feeding was reversible; starvation ultimately resulted in females preferring honey over bird odours. When the larval diet was restricted by crowding, the wing-length and total lipid of resultant adult females were reduced. Although differences were subtle, unfed bird-responding females tended to have longer wings and more lipid than their honey-responding counterparts.  相似文献   

13.
We present experimental evidence that different stages of themalaria parasite Plasmodium gallinaceum differentially affectthe host-seeking behavior of its mosquito vector Aedes aegypti.In uninfected mosquitoes, host-seeking behavior is continuedif mosquitoes have ingested less than a threshold volume ofblood, whereas a larger blood meal inhibits host seeking. Weinvestigated the parasite's effect on this behavior by feedinginfected and uninfected mosquitoes for variable amounts of timeand assaying 30-45 min later whether they continued their attemptsat blood-feeding. Mosquitoes infected with oocysts (which cannotbe transmitted) had a smaller threshold volume and were lesslikely to return for further probing, whereas individuals infectedwith transmissible sporozoites increased the threshold volumerequired to inhibit host-seeking behavior. We conclude thatthe stage-specific effect of the parasite on host-seeking behavioris likely to be an active manipulation by the parasite to increaseits transmission success.  相似文献   

14.
In a behavioural study we have investigated the role of lactic acid for the host preferences of yellow fever mosquitoes (Aedes aegypti) by comparing the attractiveness of rubbings from the hands of different human individuals and extracts obtained from skin rubbings from different mammals (Bos primigenius f. taurus, Capra aegagrus f. hircus, Felis silvestris f. catus and Homo sapiens). Certain human individuals were consistently more attractive to mosquitoes than others. Addition of lactic acid markedly increased the degree of attractiveness of formerly less attractive human odour samples and they were preferred over those which were originally the most attractive. There was almost no response to animal odour samples. In contrast to human samples, which contain a high amount of lactate, this compound could not be detected in samples from animals. When skin emanations from animals were combined with lactic acid, however, as many mosquitoes responded to odour samples of B. primigenius f. taurus and C. aegagrus f. hircus as did to human odours. All these data demonstrate that olfactory-based host preference of the anthropophilic mosquito A. aegypti is to a large extent due to differences in the amount of lactic acid in the odour samples.  相似文献   

15.

Background  

Many studies have suggested that variability in the attractiveness of humans to host-seeking mosquitoes is caused by differences in the make-up of body emanations, and olfactory signals in particular. Most investigations have either been laboratory-based, utilising odour obtained from sections of the body, or have been done in the field with sampling methods that do not discriminate between visual, physical and chemical cues of the host. Accordingly, evidence for differential attractiveness based on body emanations remains sparse in spite of the far-reaching epidemiological implications of this phenomenon.  相似文献   

16.
Host preference in females of the mosquitoes Aedes simpsoni (Theo.) and Aedes aegypti (L) appears to be based largely on responses to specific odours at short range, with the site of olfaction being the antennae. In blank Y-olfactometer tests, 48 % of an anthropophilic (llobi) strain of Ae. aegypti responded to one arm and 52% to the other. However, presented with a man's hand in one arm of the olfacto-meter and a whole rat, Arvicanthis niloticus , in the other, 65% responded to man and 35% to the rat. With the same strain in a blank Gouck's type of olfactometer, the response was very poor, only 1 % of the mosquitoes in the olfactometer responded at all, again with no preference for either side. On the introduction of the same hosts into the Gouck's olfactometer, the total response was c. 31 %, of which 72 % responded to man and 28 % to the rat. Elimination of some visual cues affected neither the total response nor the preference. Removing one antenna, reduced the preference for man from about 70 % in the normal mosquitoes to about 58%. The total response remained approximately the same as in the normal mosquitoes. Removing both antennae, in both Ae. aegypti and Ae. simpsoni , caused a sharp depression in the total response and in host discrimination.  相似文献   

17.
ABSTRACT. Female mosquitoes seeking blood respond primarily to kairomones emitted by potential hosts. We now confirm, in the laboratory, field evidence showing that the presence of other female mosquitoes at the host significantly enhances the host-seeking response. Olfactometry strongly suggests that a chemical of mosquito origin is responsible. The adaptive value of this behaviour is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Host-seeking behaviour of the anthropophilic malaria vector Anopheles gambiae sensu stricto (Diptera: Culicidae) is mediated predominantly by olfactory cues. Several hundreds of odour components have been identified from human emanations, but only a few have been proven to act as attractants or synergists in the host-seeking behaviour of female An. gambiae. In previous work, aromatics, alcohols and ketones in human odours were found to elicit electrophysiological activity in antennal olfactory neurons of female An. gambiae. However, the behavioural effects of these compounds have not been investigated. In this study, behavioural responses of female An. gambiae to components of human breath, urine and sweat at a series of concentrations, or a single concentration in the case of acetone, were examined in combination with ammonia and L-lactic acid in a dual-choice olfactometer. The results showed that at specific concentrations 4-ethylphenol, indole, 3-methyl-1-butanol and two ketones inhibited the attractive effect of a mixture of ammonia and lactic acid. Acetone on its own was not attractive; however, when combined with lactic acid, the binary mixture was attractive. When combined with ammonia, acetone inhibited the attractiveness exerted by ammonia alone. Dodecanol and dimethyldisulphide did not affect the attraction exerted by ammonia and lactic acid at any of the concentrations tested. By contrast, a human-specific armpit odour, 7-octenoic acid, augmented the attraction exerted by the combination of ammonia and lactic acid at a specific dosage.  相似文献   

19.
The activity of monophenol oxidase can be elicited in the haemolymph of Armigeres subalbatus by both blood and filaria-infected blood feeding. Haemolymph collected from both blood-fed and filaria-infected mosquitoes was investigated using a quantitative radiometric assay that measured the amount of tritiated water formed during the hydroxylation of L-[3,5-3H]tyrosine to dopa. Enzyme activity in filaria-infected mosquitoes was found to be significantly lower than that found in the blood-fed mosquitoes within 3 days post-ingestion, but still remained measurable 72 h post-ingestion. The decreased enzyme activity coincided in time with the development of capsules around the microfilariae. The consumption of monophenol oxidase by the melanization of migrating microfilariae in the haemocoel of filaria-infected mosquitoes and the effects of excretory and secretory products of developing larvae on monophenol oxidase activity are suggested.  相似文献   

20.
The taking of a blood meal and subsequent development of eggs by a female mosquito is reported to suppress host-seeking behaviour. This change in behaviour may be partly mediated by changes in certain chemosensitive antennal afferent neurones that influence the behaviour of female mosquitoes. Electrophysiological activity of the lactic acid-excited neurons to lactic acid—a normal host-attractant substance—is depressed following a blood meal. This reduction in lactic acid sensitivity is coincident with the reported inhibition of host-seeking behaviour. The reduction in lactic acid sensitivity is reversible; this sensitivity returns to the pre-blood-fed level following oviposition. Like the inhibition of host-seeking behaviour, the reduced lactic acid sensitivity is due to a transfusable, haemolymph-borne factor. A role for the peripheral sensory system in the control of behaviour in female mosquitoes is discussed.  相似文献   

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