Abstract

Mosquito-borne diseases continue to remain major threats to human and animal health and impediments to socioeconomic development. Increasing mosquito resistance to chemical insecticides is a great public health concern, and new strategies/technologies are necessary to develop the next-generation of vector control tools. We propose to develop a novel method for mosquito control that employs nanoparticles (NPs) as a platform for delivery of mosquitocidal dsRNA molecules to silence mosquito genes and cause vector lethality. Identifying optimal NP chemistry and morphology is imperative for efficient mosquitocide delivery. Toward this end, fluorescently labeled polyethylene glycol NPs of specific sizes, shapes (80 nm x 320 nm, 80 nm x 5000 nm, 200 nm x 200 nm, and 1000 nm x 1000 nm) and charges (negative and positive) were fabricated by Particle Replication in Non-Wetting Templates (PRINT) technology. Biodistribution, persistence, and toxicity of PRINT NPs were evaluated in vitro in mosquito cell culture and in vivo in Anopheles gambiae larvae following parenteral and oral challenge. Following parenteral challenge, the biodistribution of the positively and negatively charged NPs of each size and shape was similar; intense fluorescence was observed in thoracic and abdominal regions of the larval body. Positively charged NPs were more associated with the gastric caeca in the gastrointestinal tract. Negatively charged NPs persisted through metamorphosis and were observed in head, body and ovaries of adults. Following oral challenge, NPs were detected in the larval mid- and hindgut. Positively charged NPs were more efficiently internalized in vitro than negatively charged NPs. Positively charged NPs trafficked to the cytosol, but negatively charged NPs co-localized with lysosomes. Following in vitro and in vivo challenge, none of the NPs tested induced any cytotoxic effects.

Highlights

  • Vector-borne diseases continue to be major causes of morbidity and mortality worldwide [1]

  • There is an urgent need for new interventions and novel insecticides to control mosquito vectors of human disease agents

  • As a first step to developing nanoparticle delivery for molecular vector control, we investigated the physicochemical properties of Particle Replication in Non-Wetting Templates (PRINT) hydrogel nanoparticles with respect to their biodistribution, persistence and safety in Anopheles gambiae mosquito larvae and in cell culture

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Summary

Introduction

Vector-borne diseases continue to be major causes of morbidity and mortality worldwide [1]. There has been a dramatic reduction in malaria mortality in the last decade, especially in sub-Saharan Africa and principally attributable to the use of long lasting insecticide treated bed nets and indoor residual spraying (IRS) [2]. These dramatic gains in public health are threatened by the emergence of insecticide resistance, pyrethroid resistance, in mosquito vector populations [3]. There is a compelling need to develop new insecticidal interventions and approaches for control of mosquito vectors and the pathogens they transmit

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