Experimental determination of the force of malaria infection reveals a non-linear relationship to mosquito sporozoite loads.

Plasmodium sporozoites are the infective stage of the malaria parasite. Though this is a bottleneck for the parasite, the quantitative dynamics of transmission, from mosquito inoculation of sporozoites to patent blood-stage infection in the mammalian host, are poorly understood. Here we utilize a ro...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Maya Aleshnick, Vitaly V Ganusov, Gibran Nasir, Gayane Yenokyan, Photini Sinnis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-05-01
Series:PLoS Pathogens
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1008181
id doaj-7febb2f18f754b12b632930c442396a5
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7febb2f18f754b12b632930c442396a52021-05-21T04:32:41ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Pathogens1553-73661553-73742020-05-01165e100818110.1371/journal.ppat.1008181Experimental determination of the force of malaria infection reveals a non-linear relationship to mosquito sporozoite loads.Maya AleshnickVitaly V GanusovGibran NasirGayane YenokyanPhotini SinnisPlasmodium sporozoites are the infective stage of the malaria parasite. Though this is a bottleneck for the parasite, the quantitative dynamics of transmission, from mosquito inoculation of sporozoites to patent blood-stage infection in the mammalian host, are poorly understood. Here we utilize a rodent model to determine the probability of malaria infection after infectious mosquito bite, and consider the impact of mosquito parasite load, blood-meal acquisition, probe-time, and probe location, on infection probability. We found that infection likelihood correlates with mosquito sporozoite load and, to a lesser degree, the duration of probing, and is not dependent upon the mosquito's ability to find blood. The relationship between sporozoite load and infection probability is non-linear and can be described by a set of models that include a threshold, with mosquitoes harboring over 10,000 salivary gland sporozoites being significantly more likely to initiate a malaria infection. Overall, our data suggest that the small subset of highly infected mosquitoes may contribute disproportionally to malaria transmission in the field and that quantifying mosquito sporozoite loads could aid in predicting the force of infection in different transmission settings.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1008181
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maya Aleshnick
Vitaly V Ganusov
Gibran Nasir
Gayane Yenokyan
Photini Sinnis
spellingShingle Maya Aleshnick
Vitaly V Ganusov
Gibran Nasir
Gayane Yenokyan
Photini Sinnis
Experimental determination of the force of malaria infection reveals a non-linear relationship to mosquito sporozoite loads.
PLoS Pathogens
author_facet Maya Aleshnick
Vitaly V Ganusov
Gibran Nasir
Gayane Yenokyan
Photini Sinnis
author_sort Maya Aleshnick
title Experimental determination of the force of malaria infection reveals a non-linear relationship to mosquito sporozoite loads.
title_short Experimental determination of the force of malaria infection reveals a non-linear relationship to mosquito sporozoite loads.
title_full Experimental determination of the force of malaria infection reveals a non-linear relationship to mosquito sporozoite loads.
title_fullStr Experimental determination of the force of malaria infection reveals a non-linear relationship to mosquito sporozoite loads.
title_full_unstemmed Experimental determination of the force of malaria infection reveals a non-linear relationship to mosquito sporozoite loads.
title_sort experimental determination of the force of malaria infection reveals a non-linear relationship to mosquito sporozoite loads.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Pathogens
issn 1553-7366
1553-7374
publishDate 2020-05-01
description Plasmodium sporozoites are the infective stage of the malaria parasite. Though this is a bottleneck for the parasite, the quantitative dynamics of transmission, from mosquito inoculation of sporozoites to patent blood-stage infection in the mammalian host, are poorly understood. Here we utilize a rodent model to determine the probability of malaria infection after infectious mosquito bite, and consider the impact of mosquito parasite load, blood-meal acquisition, probe-time, and probe location, on infection probability. We found that infection likelihood correlates with mosquito sporozoite load and, to a lesser degree, the duration of probing, and is not dependent upon the mosquito's ability to find blood. The relationship between sporozoite load and infection probability is non-linear and can be described by a set of models that include a threshold, with mosquitoes harboring over 10,000 salivary gland sporozoites being significantly more likely to initiate a malaria infection. Overall, our data suggest that the small subset of highly infected mosquitoes may contribute disproportionally to malaria transmission in the field and that quantifying mosquito sporozoite loads could aid in predicting the force of infection in different transmission settings.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1008181
work_keys_str_mv AT mayaaleshnick experimentaldeterminationoftheforceofmalariainfectionrevealsanonlinearrelationshiptomosquitosporozoiteloads
AT vitalyvganusov experimentaldeterminationoftheforceofmalariainfectionrevealsanonlinearrelationshiptomosquitosporozoiteloads
AT gibrannasir experimentaldeterminationoftheforceofmalariainfectionrevealsanonlinearrelationshiptomosquitosporozoiteloads
AT gayaneyenokyan experimentaldeterminationoftheforceofmalariainfectionrevealsanonlinearrelationshiptomosquitosporozoiteloads
AT photinisinnis experimentaldeterminationoftheforceofmalariainfectionrevealsanonlinearrelationshiptomosquitosporozoiteloads
_version_ 1721432537180405760