Abstract

BackgroundMalaria control in Panama is problematic due to the high diversity of morphologically similar Anopheles mosquito species, which makes identification of vectors of human Plasmodium challenging. Strategies by Panamanian health authorities to bring malaria under control targeting Anopheles vectors could be ineffective if they tackle a misidentified species.MethodsA rapid mass spectrometry identification procedure was developed to accurately and timely sort out field-collected Neotropical Anopheles mosquitoes into vector and non-vector species. Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) mass spectra of highly-abundant proteins were generated from laboratory-reared mosquitoes using different extraction protocols, body parts, and sexes to minimize the amount of material from specimen vouchers needed and optimize the protocol for taxonomic identification. Subsequently, the mass spectra of field-collected Neotropical Anopheles mosquito species were classified using a combination of custom-made unsupervised (i.e., Principal component analysis—PCA) and supervised (i.e., Linear discriminant analysis—LDA) classification algorithms.ResultsRegardless of the protocol used or the mosquito species and sex, the legs contained the least intra-specific variability with enough well-preserved proteins to differentiate among distinct biological species, consistent with previous literature. After minimizing the amount of material needed from the voucher, one leg was enough to produce reliable spectra between specimens. Further, both PCA and LDA were able to classify up to 12 mosquito species, from different subgenera and seven geographically spread localities across Panama using mass spectra from one leg pair. LDA demonstrated high discriminatory power and consistency, with validation and cross-validation positive identification rates above 93% at the species level.ConclusionThe selected sample processing procedure can be used to identify field-collected Anopheles species, including vectors of Plasmodium, in a short period of time, with a minimal amount of tissue and without the need of an expert mosquito taxonomist. This strategy to analyse protein spectra overcomes the drawbacks of working without a reference library to classify unknown samples. Finally, this MALDI approach can aid ongoing malaria eradication efforts in Panama and other countries with large number of mosquito’s species by improving vector surveillance in epidemic-prone sites such as indigenous Comarcas.

Highlights

  • Malaria control in Panama is problematic due to the high diversity of morphologically similar Anopheles mosquito species, which makes identification of vectors of human Plasmodium challenging

  • Protocol #1 was slightly faster than Protocol #2 since it did not involve the incubation of the sample; it was the most labor intensive due to one additional washing step with ethanol plus additional decantation and centrifuging steps

  • Different methodologies to handle samples with the Matrix-assisted laser desorp‐ tion/ionization (MALDI) mass spectrometry might result in different outcomes, yet few published studies have evaluated the influence of these differences on the resulting protein spectra

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Summary

Introduction

Malaria control in Panama is problematic due to the high diversity of morphologically similar Anopheles mosquito species, which makes identification of vectors of human Plasmodium challenging. Strategies by Panama‐ nian health authorities to bring malaria under control targeting Anopheles vectors could be ineffective if they tackle a misidentified species. From 2001 to 2005, a malaria outbreak was documented in indigenous territories known as “Comarcas” where a sixfold increase in the number of cases was observed [5, 6]. This epidemic was controlled during subsequent years, and the number of symptomatic cases in the country has dropped considerably since this event. Malaria is still endemic in Panama, and there is potential for future outbreaks in indigenous Comarcas with health, social and demographic disparities [3, 6]

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