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Inter-species microbiota transplantation recapitulates microbial acquisition and persistence in mosquitoes

Coon, Kerri L.; Hegde, Shivanand; Hughes, Grant L.

Authors

Kerri L. Coon

Grant L. Hughes



Abstract

Background Mosquitoes harbor microbial communities that play important roles in their growth, survival, reproduction, and ability to transmit human pathogens. Microbiome transplantation approaches are often used to study host-microbe interactions and identify microbial taxa and assemblages associated with health or disease. However, no such approaches have been developed to manipulate the microbiota of mosquitoes.

Results Here, we developed an approach to transfer entire microbial communities between mosquito cohorts. We undertook transfers between (Culex quinquefasciatus to Aedes aegypti) and within (Ae. aegypti to Ae. aegypti) species to validate the approach and determine the number of mosquitoes required to prepare donor microbiota. After the transfer, we monitored mosquito development and microbiota dynamics throughout the life cycle. Typical holometabolous lifestyle-related microbiota structures were observed, with higher dynamics of microbial structures in larval stages, including the larval water, and less diversity in adults. Microbiota diversity in recipient adults was also more similar to the microbiota diversity in donor adults.

Conclusions This study provides the first evidence for successful microbiome transplantation in mosquitoes. Our results highlight the value of such methods for studying mosquito-microbe interactions and lay the foundation for future studies to elucidate the factors underlying microbiota acquisition, assembly, and function in mosquitoes under controlled conditions.

Citation

Coon, K. L., Hegde, S., & Hughes, G. L. Inter-species microbiota transplantation recapitulates microbial acquisition and persistence in mosquitoes. arXiv, https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.10.06.463328

Journal Article Type Other
Deposit Date Feb 13, 2024
Print ISSN 2331-8422
Publisher Cornell University
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
DOI https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.10.06.463328
Publisher URL https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.10.06.463328v1