Towards the Laboratory Maintenance of Haemagogus janthinomys (Dyar, 1921), the Major Neotropical Vector of Sylvatic Yellow Fever.
Adam HendyNelson Ferreira FéDanielle ValérioEduardo Hernandez-AcostaBárbara Aparecida ChavesLuís Felipe Alho da SilvaRosa Amélia Gonçalves SantanaAndréia da Costa PazMatheus Mickael Mota SoaresFlamarion Prado AssunçãoJosé Tenaçol AndesChiara AndolinaVera Margarete ScarpassaMarcus Vinícius Guimarães de LacerdaKathryn A HanleyNikos VasilakisPublished in: Viruses (2022)
Haemagogus (Haemagogus) janthinomys (Dyar, 1921), the major neotropical vector of sylvatic yellow fever virus, is notoriously difficult to maintain in captivity. It has never been reared beyond an F 1 generation, and almost no experimental transmission studies have been performed with this species since the 1940s. Herein we describe installment hatching, artificial blood feeding, and forced-mating techniques that enabled us to produce small numbers of F 3 generation Hg. janthinomys eggs for the first time. A total of 62.8% (1562/2486) F 1 generation eggs hatched during ≤10 four-day cycles of immersion in a bamboo leaf infusion followed by partial drying. Hatching decreased to 20.1% (190/944) in the F 2 generation for eggs laid by mosquitoes copulated by forced mating. More than 85% (79/92) female F 2 mosquitoes fed on an artificial blood feeding system. While we were unable to maintain a laboratory colony of Hg. janthinomys past the F 3 generation, our methods provide a foundation for experimental transmission studies with this species in a laboratory setting, a critical capacity in a region with hyper-endemic transmission of dengue, Zika, and chikungunya viruses, all posing a risk of spillback into a sylvatic cycle.