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  • Mosquito takes chemical cues from bacteria

    Source: http://www.rsc.org/chemistryworld/Ne...y/08070801.asp

    Yellow fever mosquito takes chemical cues from bacteria

    08 July 2008

    Bacterial chemicals that encourage female mosquitoes to lay eggs could help to stem the spread of mosquito-borne diseases like dengue and yellow fever, according to US scientists.

    Coby Schal and colleagues at North Carolina State University have shown that female mosquitoes of the species Aedes aegypti respond to simple fatty acids, such as tetradecanoic acid, and esters in bacterial cell walls. The researchers plan to use the stimulants to persuade pregnant mosquitoes to spend more time on waters laced with insecticides or biological control agents.

    'The beauty of the compounds we're working with is that they act on not just females but pregnant females,' says Schal. Pregnant female mosquitoes are key targets for disease control programmes because, unlike males, they feed on blood and so can carry and transmit disease.

    Schal's team identified the compounds that stimulated egg laying by fractionating extracts from bacteria found in water. By providing the insects with a choice between two cups - one containing bacterial compounds and one containing only water - they were able to identify the most potent stimulants.

    The compounds could be helping female mosquitoes to decide if a location contains enough of the right bacteria to feed their offspring, says Schal. Female mosquitoes probably detect the chemicals through chemoreceptors on their feet, or on egg-laying organs called ovipositors. 'From looking at the behaviour of the female, from the way she rocks on the water, it appears that the ovipositor is very likely involved,' notes Schal.

    The compounds are found in many foods, including oils such as coconut oil. 'These are very safe compounds, so if we put them in traps they would be safe to humans, pets and the environment,' Schal says.

    Michael Birkett, of the Rothamsted Centre for Sustainable Pest and Disease Management, says the research shows potential for developing disease control strategies. But he stresses that such strategies will depend on finely balanced formulations of the stimulating compounds. 'There's very clear data in this study that shows that if you get an inappropriate dose or mixture of compounds, then you're going to lose activity,' he says.

    Hayley Birch

    References

    L Ponnusamy et al, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci., 2008, 105, 9262 (DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0802505105)

  • #2
    Re: Mosquito takes chemical cues from bacteria

    Source: http://www.newswise.com/articles/view/542453/

    Scientists Discover Which Waters Egg-Laying Mosquitoes Like Best

    Newswise ? Scientists at Tulane and North Carolina State universities have identified the chemical cues in water that entice yellow fever mosquitoes to lay their eggs. The study is the first to isolate the compounds that the finicky mosquitoes look for to breed in open water containers.

    The findings are significant because they could lead to the development of targeted lures to control the insects, which also spread dengue fever in more than 100 countries across the globe.

    "No one has developed lures that target these species of mosquitoes because no one has been able to identify and isolate the compounds necessary to mass produce them into a commercially available trap," says study co-author Dawn Wesson, asso?ciate professor of tropical medicine at Tulane University. "It?s also important to note that these lures would target egg-laying mosquitoes, which are especially dangerous because they have fed on blood at least once, and could be infected with a virus."

    In a paper in this week's issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, researchers show that yellow fever mosquitoes (Aedes aegypti) look for water with just the right amount of specific fatty acids associated with bacteria from decaying leaves and other organic debris. The article "Identification of Bacteria and Bacteria-Associated Chemical Cues That Mediate Oviposition Site Preferences by Aedes aegypti" was co-authored by Wesson and North Carolina State University researchers Charles Apperson, Coby Schal, Loganathan Ponnusamy, Ning Xu and Satoshi Nojima.

    Yellow fever mosquitoes lay their eggs in human-made containers, usually distributing them in multiple places in residential areas. The study measured mosquitoes' responses to several containers filled with different types of bacteria and bacterial extracts to see which attracted the most egg-laying. Scientists found that the mosquitoes were attracted by a blend of fatty acids and methyl esters created from decaying leaves. Once scientists discerned specific chemical compounds that stimulated increased egg-laying, they exposed mosquitoes to varied concentrations. High levels of the chemicals discouraged the insects from laying eggs while lower concentration were more convincing. However, the mosquitoes preferred just the right amount of the chemical blend ? 10 nanograms in 30 milliliters of water ? to lay the most eggs.

    Researchers say the right percentages of these chemicals tell the mosquitoes that the microbial content of the water is most favorable for the development of offspring.

    A copy of the research paper is available online at: http://www.pnas.org/content/early/20....full.pdf+html

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