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The fungus Leptosphaerulina persists in Anopheles gambiae and induces melanization
Author(s) -
Godfrey Nattoh,
Joel L. Bargul,
Gabriel Magoma,
Lilian Mbaisi,
Hellen Butungi,
Enock Mararo,
Evan Teal,
Jeremy K. Herren
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0246452
Subject(s) - anopheles gambiae , biology , midgut , larva , host (biology) , fungus , anopheles , zoology , ecology , botany , malaria , immunology
Anopheles mosquitoes are colonized by diverse microorganisms that may impact on host biology and vectorial capacity. Eukaryotic symbionts such as fungi have been isolated from Anopheles , but whether they are stably associated with mosquitoes and transmitted transstadially across mosquito life stages or to subsequent generations remains largely unexplored. Here, we show that a Leptosphaerulina sp. fungus isolated from the midgut of An . gambiae can be stably associated with An . gambiae host and that it imposes low fitness cost when re-introduced through co-feeding. This fungus is transstadially transmitted across An . gambiae developmental stages and to their progeny. It is present in field-caught larvae and adult mosquitoes at moderate levels across geographical regions. We observed that Leptosphaerulina sp. induces a distinctive melanotic phenotype across the developmental stages of mosquito. As a eukaryotic symbiont that is stably associated with An . gambiae Leptosphaerulina sp. can be explored for paratransgenesis.

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