Transcriptomic, proteomic and ultrastructural studies on salinity-tolerant Aedes aegypti in the context of rising sea levels and arboviral disease epidemiology.
Ranjan RamasamyVaikunthavasan ThiruchenthooranTibutius T P JayadasThampoe EswaramohanSharanga SanthirasegaramKokila SivabalakrishnanArunasalam NaguleswaranMarilyne UzestBastien CayrolSébastien Nicolas VoisinPhilippe BuletSinnathamby Noble SurendranPublished in: BMC genomics (2021)
The findings provide new information on molecular and ultrastructural changes associated with salinity adaptation in FW mosquitoes. Changes in cuticles of larvae and adults of salinity-tolerant Ae. aegypti are expected to reduce the efficacy of insecticides used for controlling arboviral diseases. Expansion of coastal BW habitats and their neglect for control measures facilitates the spread of salinity-tolerant Ae. aegypti and genes for salinity tolerance. The transmission of arboviral diseases can therefore be amplified in multiple ways by salinity-tolerant Ae. aegypti and requires appropriate mitigating measures. The findings in Ae. aegypti have attendant implications for the development of salinity tolerance in other fresh water mosquito vectors and the diseases they transmit.