Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1186/s13071-016-1469-6
Title: Membrane feeding of dengue patient's blood as a substitute for direct skin feeding in studying Aedes-dengue virus interaction
Authors: Tan, C.-H
Wong, P.-S.J
Li, M.-Z.I
Yang, H.-T
Chong, C.-S
Lee, L.K
Yuan, S
Leo, Y.-S 
Ng, L.-C
Lye, D.C 
Keywords: adult
Aedes
animal experiment
animal tissue
Article
clinical article
correlational study
dengue
direct skin feeding assay
female
host pathogen interaction
human
infection rate
investigative procedures
membrane feeding assay
midgut
nonhuman
reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction
salivary gland
serotype
virus titration
virus transmission
Aedes
animal
blood
dengue
Dengue virus
feeding behavior
genetics
insect vector
isolation and purification
male
parasitology
physiology
skin
transmission
virology
Aedes
Animals
Dengue
Dengue Virus
Feeding Behavior
Female
Humans
Insect Vectors
Male
Skin
Issue Date: 2016
Citation: Tan, C.-H, Wong, P.-S.J, Li, M.-Z.I, Yang, H.-T, Chong, C.-S, Lee, L.K, Yuan, S, Leo, Y.-S, Ng, L.-C, Lye, D.C (2016). Membrane feeding of dengue patient's blood as a substitute for direct skin feeding in studying Aedes-dengue virus interaction. Parasites and Vectors 9 (1) : 1469. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13071-016-1469-6
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
Abstract: Background: Understanding the interaction between Aedes vectors and dengue viruses (DENV) has significant implications in determining the transmission dynamics of dengue. The absence of an animal model and ethical concerns regarding direct feeding of mosquitoes on patients has resulted in most infection studies using blood meals spiked with laboratory-cultured DENV. Data obtained from such studies may not reflect the natural human-mosquito transmission scenario. This study explored the potential of using membrane feeding of dengue patient's blood as a substitute for direct skin feeding. Methods: Four to six-day old female Ae. aegypti were provided the opportunity to feed via direct exposure to a patient's forearm for 15'min or via exposure to EDTA-treated blood from the same patient through an artificial membrane for 30'min. Mosquitoes from both feeding methods were incubated inside environmental chambers. Mosquitoes were sampled at day 13 post-feeding. Midgut and salivary glands of each mosquito were dissected to determine DENV infection by RT-qPCR and viral titration, respectively. Results: Feeding rates: Direct skin feeding assay (DSFA) consistently showed higher mosquito feeding rates (93.3-100'%) when compared with the membrane feeding assay (MFA) (48-98.2'%). Midgut infection: Pair-wise comparison between methods showed no significant difference in midgut infection rates between mosquitoes exposed via each method and a strong correlation was observed in midgut infection rates for both feeding methods (r = 0.89, P < 0.0001). Overall midgut viral titers (n = 20) obtained by both methods were comparable (P ≥ 0.06). Salivary gland infection: Pair-wise comparison between both methods revealed no significant difference in salivary gland infection rate. Strong correlation in salivary gland infection was observed between DSFA and MFA (r = 0.81, P < 0.0001). In general, mosquitoes fed directly on dengue patients and those on patients' blood (n = 11) had comparable virus titer (P ≥ 0.09). Conclusion: DENV midgut and salivary gland infection rates showed good concordance between DSFA and MFA blood meal exposure methods. Freshly-obtained venous blood in EDTA from dengue patients for MFA can be used as a substitute to DSFA, especially in circumstances where bioethics approval or patient recruitment is difficult to obtain for vector competence studies. Nevertheless, mosquito numbers will need to be increased to compensate for lower feeding rate in MFA. © 2016 Tan et al.
Source Title: Parasites and Vectors
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/179934
ISSN: 17563305
DOI: 10.1186/s13071-016-1469-6
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
Appears in Collections:Staff Publications
Elements

Show full item record
Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormatAccess SettingsVersion 
10_1186_s13071-016-1469-6.pdf1.05 MBAdobe PDF

OPEN

NoneView/Download

Google ScholarTM

Check

Altmetric


This item is licensed under a Creative Commons License Creative Commons