PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Salivary gland-specific P. berghei reporter lines enable rapid evaluation of tissue-specific sporozoite loads in mosquitoes.

  • Chandra Ramakrishnan,
  • Annika Rademacher,
  • Julien Soichot,
  • Giulia Costa,
  • Andrew P Waters,
  • Chris J Janse,
  • Jai Ramesar,
  • Blandine M Franke-Fayard,
  • Elena A Levashina

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0036376
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 5
p. e36376

Abstract

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Malaria is a life-threatening human infectious disease transmitted by mosquitoes. Levels of the salivary gland sporozoites (sgs), the only mosquito stage infectious to a mammalian host, represent an important cumulative index of Plasmodium development within a mosquito. However, current techniques of sgs quantification are laborious and imprecise. Here, transgenic P. berghei reporter lines that produce the green fluorescent protein fused to luciferase (GFP-LUC) specifically in sgs were generated, verified and characterised. Fluorescence microscopy confirmed the sgs stage specificity of expression of the reporter gene. The luciferase activity of the reporter lines was then exploited to establish a simple and fast biochemical assay to evaluate sgs loads in whole mosquitoes. Using this assay we successfully identified differences in sgs loads in mosquitoes silenced for genes that display opposing effects on P. berghei ookinete/oocyst development. It offers a new powerful tool to study infectivity of P. berghei to the mosquito, including analysis of vector-parasite interactions and evaluation of transmission-blocking vaccines.