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   Establishment of a Wolbachia Superinfection in Aedes aegypti Mosquitoes as a Potential Approach for Future Resistance Management  
   
نویسنده joubert d.a. ,walker t. ,carrington l.b. ,de bruyne j.t. ,kien d.h.t. ,hoang n.l.t. ,chau n.v.v. ,iturbe-ormaetxe i. ,simmons c.p. ,o’neill s.l.
منبع plos pathogens - 2016 - دوره : 12 - شماره : 2
چکیده    Wolbachia pipientis is an endosymbiotic bacterium estimated to chronically infect between 40–75% of all arthropod species. aedes aegypti,the principle mosquito vector of dengue virus (denv),is not a natural host of wolbachia. the transinfection of wolbachia strains such as walbb,wmel and wmelpop-cla into ae. aegypti has been shown to significantly reduce the vector competence of this mosquito for a range of human pathogens in the laboratory. this has led to wmel-transinfected ae. aegypti currently being released in five countries to evaluate its effectiveness to control dengue disease in human populations. here we describe the generation of a superinfected ae. aegypti mosquito line simultaneously infected with two avirulent wolbachia strains,wmel and walbb. the line carries a high overall wolbachia density and tissue localisation of the individual strains is very similar to each respective single infected parental line. the superinfected line induces unidirectional cytoplasmic incompatibility (ci) when crossed to each single infected parental line,suggesting that the superinfection would have the capacity to replace either of the single constituent infections already present in a mosquito population. no significant differences in fitness parameters were observed between the superinfected line and the parental lines under the experimental conditions tested. finally,the superinfected line blocks denv replication more efficiently than the single wmel strain when challenged with blood meals from viremic dengue patients. these results suggest that the deployment of superinfections could be used to replace single infections and may represent an effective strategy to help manage potential resistance by denv to field deployments of single infected strains. © 2016 joubert et al.
آدرس school of biological sciences,monash university,clayton,melbourne,vic, Australia, school of biological sciences,monash university,clayton,melbourne,vic,australia,department of disease control,london school of hygiene and tropical medicine,keppel street,london, United Kingdom, oxford university clinical research unit,hospital for tropical diseases,ho chi minh city,viet nam,department of microbiology and immunology,university of melbourne at the peter doherty institute,parkville,melbourne,vic, Australia, school of biological sciences,monash university,clayton,melbourne,vic, Australia, oxford university clinical research unit,hospital for tropical diseases,ho chi minh city, Viet Nam, oxford university clinical research unit,hospital for tropical diseases,ho chi minh city, Viet Nam, hospital for tropical diseases,ho chi minh city, Viet Nam, school of biological sciences,monash university,clayton,melbourne,vic, Australia, oxford university clinical research unit,hospital for tropical diseases,ho chi minh city,viet nam,department of microbiology and immunology,university of melbourne at the peter doherty institute,parkville,melbourne,vic, Australia, school of biological sciences,monash university,clayton,melbourne,vic, Australia
 
     
   
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