Blood meal analysis of Anopheles vectors of simian malaria based on laboratory and field studies

Blood feeding and host-seeking behaviors of a mosquito play an imperative role in determining its vectorial capacity in transmitting pathogens. Unfortunately, limited information is available regarding blood feeding behavior of Anopheles species in Malaysia. Collection of resting Anopheles mosquitoe...

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Main Authors: Jeyaprakasam, Nantha Kumar, Low, Van Lun, Liew, Jonathan Wee Kent, Pramasivan, Sandthya, Wan-Sulaiman, Wan-Yusoff, Saeung, Atiporn, Vythilingam, Indra
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Published: Nature Research 2022
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/33488/
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spelling my.um.eprints.334882022-07-29T08:34:29Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/33488/ Blood meal analysis of Anopheles vectors of simian malaria based on laboratory and field studies Jeyaprakasam, Nantha Kumar Low, Van Lun Liew, Jonathan Wee Kent Pramasivan, Sandthya Wan-Sulaiman, Wan-Yusoff Saeung, Atiporn Vythilingam, Indra Q Science (General) T Technology (General) Blood feeding and host-seeking behaviors of a mosquito play an imperative role in determining its vectorial capacity in transmitting pathogens. Unfortunately, limited information is available regarding blood feeding behavior of Anopheles species in Malaysia. Collection of resting Anopheles mosquitoes for blood meal analysis poses a great challenge especially for forest dwelling mosquitoes. Therefore, a laboratory-based study was conducted to evaluate the potential use of mosquitoes caught using human landing catch (HLC) for blood meal analysis, and subsequently to document blood feeding behavior of local Anopheles mosquitoes in Peninsular Malaysia. The laboratory-based experiment from this study revealed that mosquitoes caught using HLC had the potential to be used for blood meal analysis. Besides HLC, mosquitoes were also collected using manual aspirator and Mosquito Magnet. Overall, 47.4% of 321 field-caught Anopheles mosquitoes belonging to six species were positive for vertebrate host DNA in their blood meal. The most frequent blood meal source was human (45.9%) followed by wild boar (27.4%), dog (15.3%) and monkey (7.5%). Interestingly, only Anopheles cracens and Anopheles introlatus (Leucosphyrus Group) fed on monkey. This study further confirmed that members of the Leucosphyrus Group are the predominant vectors for knowlesi malaria transmission in Peninsular Malaysia mainly due to their simio-anthropophagic feeding behavior. Nature Research 2022-01-10 Article PeerReviewed Jeyaprakasam, Nantha Kumar and Low, Van Lun and Liew, Jonathan Wee Kent and Pramasivan, Sandthya and Wan-Sulaiman, Wan-Yusoff and Saeung, Atiporn and Vythilingam, Indra (2022) Blood meal analysis of Anopheles vectors of simian malaria based on laboratory and field studies. Scientific Reports, 12 (1). ISSN 2045-2322, DOI https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-04106-w <https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-04106-w>. 10.1038/s41598-021-04106-w
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic Q Science (General)
T Technology (General)
spellingShingle Q Science (General)
T Technology (General)
Jeyaprakasam, Nantha Kumar
Low, Van Lun
Liew, Jonathan Wee Kent
Pramasivan, Sandthya
Wan-Sulaiman, Wan-Yusoff
Saeung, Atiporn
Vythilingam, Indra
Blood meal analysis of Anopheles vectors of simian malaria based on laboratory and field studies
description Blood feeding and host-seeking behaviors of a mosquito play an imperative role in determining its vectorial capacity in transmitting pathogens. Unfortunately, limited information is available regarding blood feeding behavior of Anopheles species in Malaysia. Collection of resting Anopheles mosquitoes for blood meal analysis poses a great challenge especially for forest dwelling mosquitoes. Therefore, a laboratory-based study was conducted to evaluate the potential use of mosquitoes caught using human landing catch (HLC) for blood meal analysis, and subsequently to document blood feeding behavior of local Anopheles mosquitoes in Peninsular Malaysia. The laboratory-based experiment from this study revealed that mosquitoes caught using HLC had the potential to be used for blood meal analysis. Besides HLC, mosquitoes were also collected using manual aspirator and Mosquito Magnet. Overall, 47.4% of 321 field-caught Anopheles mosquitoes belonging to six species were positive for vertebrate host DNA in their blood meal. The most frequent blood meal source was human (45.9%) followed by wild boar (27.4%), dog (15.3%) and monkey (7.5%). Interestingly, only Anopheles cracens and Anopheles introlatus (Leucosphyrus Group) fed on monkey. This study further confirmed that members of the Leucosphyrus Group are the predominant vectors for knowlesi malaria transmission in Peninsular Malaysia mainly due to their simio-anthropophagic feeding behavior.
format Article
author Jeyaprakasam, Nantha Kumar
Low, Van Lun
Liew, Jonathan Wee Kent
Pramasivan, Sandthya
Wan-Sulaiman, Wan-Yusoff
Saeung, Atiporn
Vythilingam, Indra
author_facet Jeyaprakasam, Nantha Kumar
Low, Van Lun
Liew, Jonathan Wee Kent
Pramasivan, Sandthya
Wan-Sulaiman, Wan-Yusoff
Saeung, Atiporn
Vythilingam, Indra
author_sort Jeyaprakasam, Nantha Kumar
title Blood meal analysis of Anopheles vectors of simian malaria based on laboratory and field studies
title_short Blood meal analysis of Anopheles vectors of simian malaria based on laboratory and field studies
title_full Blood meal analysis of Anopheles vectors of simian malaria based on laboratory and field studies
title_fullStr Blood meal analysis of Anopheles vectors of simian malaria based on laboratory and field studies
title_full_unstemmed Blood meal analysis of Anopheles vectors of simian malaria based on laboratory and field studies
title_sort blood meal analysis of anopheles vectors of simian malaria based on laboratory and field studies
publisher Nature Research
publishDate 2022
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/33488/
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