Scientific Reports (Nov 2023)

Unravelling the genome of the brackish water malaria vector Anopheles aquasalis

  • Rodrigo Maciel Alencar,
  • Cesar Camilo Prado Sepulveda,
  • Luis Martinez-Villegas,
  • Ana Cristina Bahia,
  • Rosa Amélia Santana,
  • Igor Belém de Souza,
  • Gigliola Mayara Ayres D’Elia,
  • Ana Paula Marques Duarte,
  • Marcus Vinicius Guimarães de Lacerda,
  • Wuelton Marcelo Monteiro,
  • Nágila Francinete Costa Secundino,
  • Paulo Filemon Paolucci Pimenta,
  • Leonardo Barbosa Koerich

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-47830-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Malaria is a severe public health problem in several developing tropical and subtropical countries. Anopheles aquasalis is the primary coastal malaria vector in Central and South America and the Caribbean Islands, and it has the peculiar feature of living in water with large changes in salinity. Recent research has recognised An. aquasalis as an important model for studying the interactions of murine and human Plasmodium parasites. This study presents the complete genome of An. aquasalis and offers insights into its evolution and physiology. The genome is similar in size and gene content to other Neotropical anophelines, with 162 Mb and 12,446 protein-coding genes. There are 1387 single-copy orthologs at the Diptera level (eg. An. gambiae, An. darlingi and Drosophila melanogaster). An. aquasalis diverged from An. darlingi, the primary malaria vector in inland South America, nearly 20 million years ago. Proteins related to ion transport and metabolism belong to the most abundant gene families with 660 genes. We identified gene families relevant to osmosis control (e.g., aquaporins, vacuolar-ATPases, Na+/K+-ATPases, and carbonic anhydrases). Evolutionary analysis suggests that all osmotic regulation genes are under strong purifying selection. We also observed low copy number variation in insecticide resistance and immunity-related genes for all known classical pathways. The data provided by this study offers candidate genes for further studies of parasite-vector interactions and for studies on how anophelines of brackish water deal with the high fluctuation in water salinity. We also established data and insights supporting An. aquasalis as an emerging Neotropical malaria vector model for genetic and molecular studies.