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Sequential blood meals promote Leishmania replication and reverse metacyclogenesis augmenting vector infectivity.

Tiago D SerafimIliano V Coutinho-AbreuFabiano OliveiraClaudio MenesesShaden KamhawiJesus G Valenzuela
Published in: Nature microbiology (2018)
Sand flies, similar to most vectors, take multiple blood meals during their lifetime1-4. The effect of subsequent blood meals on pathogens developing in the vector and their impact on disease transmission have never been examined. Here, we show that ingestion of a second uninfected blood meal by Leishmania-infected sand flies triggers dedifferentiation of metacyclic promastigotes, considered a terminally differentiated stage inside the vector 5 , to a leptomonad-like stage, the retroleptomonad promastigote. Reverse metacyclogenesis occurs after every subsequent blood meal where retroleptomonad promastigotes rapidly multiply and differentiate to metacyclic promastigotes enhancing sand fly infectiousness. Importantly, a subsequent blood meal amplifies the few Leishmania parasites acquired by feeding on infected hosts by 125-fold, and increases lesion frequency by fourfold, in twice-fed compared with single-fed flies. These findings place readily available blood sources as a critical element in transmission and propagation of vector-borne pathogens.
Keyphrases
  • drinking water
  • hiv infected
  • drosophila melanogaster
  • multidrug resistant
  • antimicrobial resistance
  • gram negative