Leishmania manipulation of sand fly feeding behavior results in enhanced transmission.

In nature the prevalence of Leishmania infection in whole sand fly populations can be very low (<0.1%), even in areas of endemicity and high transmission. It has long since been assumed that the protozoan parasite Leishmania can manipulate the feeding behavior of its sand fly vector, thus enhanci...

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Published in:PLoS Pathogens
Main Authors: Matthew E Rogers, Paul A Bates
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2007-06-01
Online Access:https://journals.plos.org/plospathogens/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.ppat.0030091&type=printable
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author Matthew E Rogers
Paul A Bates
author_facet Matthew E Rogers
Paul A Bates
author_sort Matthew E Rogers
collection DOAJ
container_title PLoS Pathogens
description In nature the prevalence of Leishmania infection in whole sand fly populations can be very low (<0.1%), even in areas of endemicity and high transmission. It has long since been assumed that the protozoan parasite Leishmania can manipulate the feeding behavior of its sand fly vector, thus enhancing transmission efficiency, but neither the way in which it does so nor the mechanisms behind such manipulation have been described. A key feature of parasite development in the sand fly gut is the secretion of a gel-like plug composed of filamentous proteophosphoglycan. Using both experimental and natural parasite-sand fly combinations we show that secretion of this gel is accompanied by differentiation of mammal-infective transmission stages. Further, Leishmania infection specifically causes an increase in vector biting persistence on mice (re-feeding after interruption) and also promotes feeding on multiple hosts. Both of these aspects of vector behavior were found to be finely tuned to the differentiation of parasite transmission stages in the sand fly gut. By experimentally accelerating the development rate of the parasites, we showed that Leishmania can optimize its transmission by inducing increased biting persistence only when infective stages are present. This crucial adaptive manipulation resulted in enhanced infection of experimental hosts. Thus, we demonstrate that behavioral manipulation of the infected vector provides a selective advantage to the parasite by significantly increasing transmission.
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spelling doaj-art-86eef4e10ea64879ae1fbdd1d49d4db32025-08-20T02:17:29ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Pathogens1553-73661553-73742007-06-0136e9110.1371/journal.ppat.0030091Leishmania manipulation of sand fly feeding behavior results in enhanced transmission.Matthew E RogersPaul A BatesIn nature the prevalence of Leishmania infection in whole sand fly populations can be very low (<0.1%), even in areas of endemicity and high transmission. It has long since been assumed that the protozoan parasite Leishmania can manipulate the feeding behavior of its sand fly vector, thus enhancing transmission efficiency, but neither the way in which it does so nor the mechanisms behind such manipulation have been described. A key feature of parasite development in the sand fly gut is the secretion of a gel-like plug composed of filamentous proteophosphoglycan. Using both experimental and natural parasite-sand fly combinations we show that secretion of this gel is accompanied by differentiation of mammal-infective transmission stages. Further, Leishmania infection specifically causes an increase in vector biting persistence on mice (re-feeding after interruption) and also promotes feeding on multiple hosts. Both of these aspects of vector behavior were found to be finely tuned to the differentiation of parasite transmission stages in the sand fly gut. By experimentally accelerating the development rate of the parasites, we showed that Leishmania can optimize its transmission by inducing increased biting persistence only when infective stages are present. This crucial adaptive manipulation resulted in enhanced infection of experimental hosts. Thus, we demonstrate that behavioral manipulation of the infected vector provides a selective advantage to the parasite by significantly increasing transmission.https://journals.plos.org/plospathogens/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.ppat.0030091&type=printable
spellingShingle Matthew E Rogers
Paul A Bates
Leishmania manipulation of sand fly feeding behavior results in enhanced transmission.
title Leishmania manipulation of sand fly feeding behavior results in enhanced transmission.
title_full Leishmania manipulation of sand fly feeding behavior results in enhanced transmission.
title_fullStr Leishmania manipulation of sand fly feeding behavior results in enhanced transmission.
title_full_unstemmed Leishmania manipulation of sand fly feeding behavior results in enhanced transmission.
title_short Leishmania manipulation of sand fly feeding behavior results in enhanced transmission.
title_sort leishmania manipulation of sand fly feeding behavior results in enhanced transmission
url https://journals.plos.org/plospathogens/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.ppat.0030091&type=printable
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