Abstract

ABSTRACT Plasmodium sporozoites associated with the midgut and in the hemolymph of mosquitoes differ from sporozoites in the secretory cavities and ducts of the insects’ salivary glands in their transcriptome, proteome, motility, and infectivity. Using an ex vivo Anopheles stephensi salivary gland culture system incorporating simple microfluidics and transgenic Plasmodium berghei with the fluorescent protein gene mCherry under the transcriptional control of the Pbuis4 promoter whose expression served as a proxy for parasite maturation, we observed rapid parasite maturation in the absence of salivary gland invasion. While in vivo Pbuis4::mCherry expression was only detectable in sporozoites within the salivary glands (mature parasites) as expected, the simple exposure of P. berghei sporozoites to dissected salivary glands led to rapid parasite maturation as indicated by mCherry expression. These results suggest that previous efforts to develop ex vivo and in vitro systems for investigating sporozoite interactions with mosquito salivary glands have likely been unsuccessful in part because the maturation of sporozoites leads to a loss in the ability to invade salivary glands.

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