blood digestion
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Blaire Steven ◽  
Jacquelyn LaReau ◽  
Josephine Hyde ◽  
Doug Brackney

Abstract The microbiota of Aedes aegypti has been the subject of much research due to the potential role of the microbiome in mosquito physiology, development, and vectorial capacity. Axenic mosquitoes were colonized with environmental bacteria to compare microbiota acquired from the environment to insectary reared counterparts, particularly regarding blood meal digestion. Observationally, environmentally colonized mosquitoes showed faster blood digestion than insectary mosquitoes. 16S rRNA gene sequencing revealed that the diversity and community structure of the midgut microbiomes were distinct between the groups, with the environmental microbiomes having a greater diversity and larger temporal dynamics over the course of the blood meal. Metagenomic prediction from the 16S rRNA gene sequence data pointed to functional genes such as hemolysins differing between the two microbiomes. Additionally, only bacteria cultured from the environmental mosquitoes demonstrated hemolytic ability. Presence of these hemolytic bacteria may explain the observations of differing blood digestion rates in the mosquito. These data show that microbiomes of mosquitoes colonized from an environmental water source differ taxonomically and functionally from those from the insectary, with potential influences on host blood digestion. Thus, the axenic mosquito model can be employed to interrogate various microbiome compositions and link them to phenotypic outcomes of the host.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liu Yang ◽  
Brian Weiss ◽  
Adeline Elizabeth Williams ◽  
Emre Aksoy ◽  
Alessandra de Silva Orfano ◽  
...  

Tsetse flies are vectors of parasitic African trypanosomes ( Trypanosoma  spp.). Current disease control methods include fly-repelling pesticides, trapping flies, and chemotherapeutic treatment of infected people. Inhibiting tsetse’s ability to transmit trypanosomes by strengthening the fly’s natural barriers can serve as an alternative approach to reduce disease. The peritrophic matrix (PM) is a chitinous and proteinaceous barrier that lines tsetse’s midgut. It protects the epithelial cells from the gut lumen content such as food and invading trypanosomes, which have to overcome this physical barrier to establish an infection. Bloodstream form trypanosomes shed variant surface glycoproteins (VSG) into tsetse’s gut lumen early during the infection establishment. The VSG molecules are internalized by the fly’s PM-producing cardia, which results in a reduction in tsetse  miR275  expression and a sequential molecular cascade that compromises the PM integrity. In the present study, we investigated the role(s) of  miR275  in tsetse’s midgut physiology and trypanosome infection processes by developing a paratransgenic expression system. We used tsetse’s facultative bacterial endosymbiont  Sodalis   glossinidius  to express tandem antagomir -275  repeats (or  miR275  sponge) that constitutively reduce  miR275  transcript abundance. This paratransgenic system successfully knocked down  miR275  levels in the fly’s midgut, which consequently obstructed blood digestion and modulated infection outcomes with an entomopathogenic bacteria and with trypanosomes. RNA sequencing of cardia and midgut tissues from the paratransgenic tsetse confirmed that  miR275  regulates processes related to the expression of PM-associated proteins and digestive enzymes as well as genes that encode abundant secretory proteins. Our study demonstrates that paratransgenesis can be employed to study microRNA- regulated pathways in arthropods housing symbiotic bacteria.


Author(s):  
Renu Jakhar ◽  
Surendra Kumar Gakhar

Abstract Aminopeptidase N1 (APN) is one of the important enzymes involved in blood digestion and is up-regulated along with several other enzymes in response to bloodmeal ingestion. APN is a zinc metalloprotease that cleaves one amino acid residue at a time from the amino terminus of the protein. The APN1 gene of the Indian malaria vector Anopheles culicifacies Giles was cloned and characterized. The An. culicifacies APN1 (AcAPN1) gene has an Open Reading Frame of 3084 basepairs which encodes a putative protein of 1027 amino acids. The coding region of the gene shares 81% and 78% similarity to the APN1 genes found in An. stephensi (Diptera: Culicidae) and An. gambiae (Diptera: Culicidae), respectively. The organization of the APN1 gene was studied in available mosquito genomes and a three-dimensional structure of AcAPN1 modeled using homology structure modeling. The enzymatic active site was predicted to consist of HEYAH and GAMEN amino acid residues, and a comparison of the protein sequences among different genera revealed the conservation of zinc-binding residues. The expression pattern of AcAPN1 showed that the gene was expressed rapidly in response to the ingestion of the bloodmeal and therefore this gene may be used to exploit its promoter region as an antiparasite candidate molecule.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Octavio A. C. Talyuli ◽  
Vanessa Bottino-Rojas ◽  
Carla R. Polycarpo ◽  
Pedro L. Oliveira ◽  
Gabriela O. Paiva-Silva

Blood-feeding arthropods are considered an enormous public health threat. They are vectors of a plethora of infectious agents that cause potentially fatal diseases like Malaria, Dengue fever, Leishmaniasis, and Lyme disease. These vectors shine due to their own physiological idiosyncrasies, but one biological aspect brings them all together: the requirement of blood intake for development and reproduction. It is through blood-feeding that they acquire pathogens and during blood digestion that they summon a collection of multisystemic events critical for vector competence. The literature is focused on how classical immune pathways (Toll, IMD, and JAK/Stat) are elicited throughout the course of vector infection. Still, they are not the sole determinants of host permissiveness. The dramatic changes that are the hallmark of the insect physiology after a blood meal intake are the landscape where a successful infection takes place. Dominant processes that occur in response to a blood meal are not canonical immunological traits yet are critical in establishing vector competence. These include hormonal circuitries and reproductive physiology, midgut permeability barriers, midgut homeostasis, energy metabolism, and proteolytic activity. On the other hand, the parasites themselves have a role in the outcome of these blood triggered physiological events, consistently using them in their favor. Here, to enlighten the knowledge on vector–pathogen interaction beyond the immune pathways, we will explore different aspects of the vector physiology, discussing how they give support to these long-dated host–parasite relationships.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ana Caroline P. Gandara ◽  
Felipe A. Dias ◽  
Paula C. de Lemos ◽  
Renata Stiebler ◽  
Ana Cristina S. Bombaça ◽  
...  

Low levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) are now recognized as essential players in cell signaling. Here, we studied the role of two conserved enzymes involved in redox regulation that play a critical role in the control of ROS in the digestive physiology of a blood-sucking insect, the kissing bugRhodnius prolixus. RNAi-mediated silencing ofRpNOX5andRpXDHinduced early mortality in adult females after a blood meal. Recently, a role forRpNOX5in gut motility was reported, and here, we show that midgut peristalsis is also under the control ofRpXDH. Together with impaired peristalsis, silencing either genes impaired egg production and hemoglobin digestion, and decreased hemolymph urate titers. Ultrastructurally, the silencing ofRpNOX5orRpXDHaffected midgut cells, changing the cells of blood-fed insects to a phenotype resembling the cells of unfed insects, suggesting that these genes work together in the control of blood digestion. Injection of either allopurinol (an XDH inhibitor) or uricase recapitulated the gene silencing effects, suggesting that urate itself is involved in the control of blood digestion. The silencing of each of these genes influenced the expression of the other gene in a complex way both in the unfed state and after a blood meal, revealing signaling crosstalk between them that influences redox metabolism and nitrogen excretion and plays a central role in the control of digestive physiology.


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. e0009151
Author(s):  
Moataza Dorrah ◽  
Chaima Bensaoud ◽  
Amr A. Mohamed ◽  
Daniel Sojka ◽  
Taha T. M. Bassal ◽  
...  

Host blood protein digestion plays a pivotal role in the ontogeny and reproduction of hematophagous vectors. The gut of hematophagous arthropods stores and slowly digests host blood and represents the primary gateway for transmitted pathogens. The initial step in blood degradation is induced lysis of host red blood cells (hemolysis), which releases hemoglobin for subsequent processing by digestive proteolytic enzymes. The activity cycles and characteristics of hemolysis in vectors are poorly understood. Hence, we investigated hemolysis in two evolutionarily distant blood-feeding arthropods: The mosquito Culex pipiens and the soft tick Argas persicus, both of which are important human and veterinary disease vectors. Hemolysis in both species was cyclical after blood meal ingestion. Maximum digestion occurs under slightly alkaline conditions in females. Hemolytic activity appears to be of lipoid origin in C. pipiens and enzymatic activity (proteolytic) in A. persicus. We have assessed the effect of pH, incubation time, and temperature on hemolytic activity and the hemolysin. The susceptibility of red blood cells from different hosts to the hemolysin and the effect of metabolic inhibition of hemolytic activity were assessed. We conclude that in C. pipiens and A. persicus midgut hemolysins control the amplitude of blood lysis step to guarantee an efficient blood digestion.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bianca Santos Henriques ◽  
Bruno Gomes ◽  
Pedro Lagerblad Oliveira ◽  
Elói de Souza Garcia ◽  
Patrícia Azambuja ◽  
...  

Rhodnius prolixus is one important vector for the parasite Trypanosoma cruzi in Latin America, where Chagas disease is a significant health issue. Although R. prolixus is a model for investigations of vector–parasite interaction and transmission, not much has been done recently to further comprehend its protein digestion. In this work, gut proteolysis was characterized using new fluorogenic substrates, including optimum pH, inhibition profiles, and tissue and temporal expression patterns. Each protease possessed a particular tissue prevalence and activity cycle after feeding. Cathepsin L had a higher activity in the posterior midgut lumen, being characterized by a plateau of high activities during several days in the intermediate phase of digestion. Cathepsin D showed high activity levels in the tissue homogenates and in the luminal content of the posterior midgut, with a single peak 5 days after blood feeding. Aminopeptidases are highly associated with the midgut wall, where the highest activity is located. Assays with proteinaceous substrates as casein, hemoglobin, and serum albumin revealed different activity profiles, with some evidence of biphasic temporal proteolytic patterns. Cathepsin D genes are preferentially expressed in the anterior midgut, while cathepsin L genes are mainly located in the posterior portion of the midgut, with specific sets of genes being differently expressed in the initial, intermediate, or late phases of blood digestion.Significance StatementThis is the first description in a non-dipteran hematophagous species of a sequential protease secretion system based on midgut cathepsins instead of the most common insect digestive serine proteases (trypsins and chymotrypsins). The midgut of R. prolixus (Hemiptera) shows a different temporal expression of proteases in the initial, intermediate, and late stages of blood digestion. In this respect, a different timing in protease secretion may be an example of adaptative convergence in blood-sucking vectors from different orders. Expanding the knowledge about gut physiology in triatomine vectors may contribute to the development of new control strategies, aiming the blocking of parasite transmission.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Lucas Tirloni ◽  
Gloria Braz ◽  
Rodrigo Dutra Nunes ◽  
Ana Caroline Paiva Gandara ◽  
Larissa Rezende Vieira ◽  
...  

Abstract To further obtain insights into the Rhipicephalus microplus transcriptome, we used RNA-seq to carry out a study of expression in (i) embryos; (ii) ovaries from partially and fully engorged females; (iii) salivary glands from partially engorged females; (iv) fat body from partially and fully engorged females; and (v) digestive cells from partially, and (vi) fully engorged females. We obtained > 500 million Illumina reads which were assembled de novo, producing > 190,000 contigs, identifying 18,857 coding sequences (CDS). Reads from each library were mapped back into the assembled transcriptome giving a view of gene expression in different tissues. Transcriptomic expression and pathway analysis showed that several genes related in blood digestion and host-parasite interaction were overexpressed in digestive cells compared with other tissues. Furthermore, essential genes for the cell development and embryogenesis were overexpressed in ovaries. Taken altogether, these data offer novel insights into the physiology of production and role of saliva, blood digestion, energy metabolism, and development with submission of 10,932 novel tissue/cell specific CDS to the NCBI database for this important tick species.


2020 ◽  
Vol 286 ◽  
pp. 109246
Author(s):  
Yu Huang ◽  
Huan Li ◽  
Chuanwen Wang ◽  
Xiaolin Xu ◽  
He Yu ◽  
...  

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