Abstract

BackgroundMosquitoes are colonized by a large but mostly uncharacterized natural virome of RNA viruses, and the composition and distribution of the natural RNA virome may influence the biology and immunity of Anopheles malaria vector populations.ResultsAnopheles mosquitoes were sampled in malaria endemic forest village sites in Senegal and Cambodia, including Anopheles funestus, Anopheles gambiae group sp., and Anopheles coustani in Senegal, and Anopheles hyrcanus group sp., Anopheles maculatus group sp., and Anopheles dirus in Cambodia. The most frequent mosquito species sampled at both study sites are human malaria vectors. Small and long RNA sequences were depleted of mosquito host sequences, de novo assembled and clustered to yield non-redundant contigs longer than 500 nucleotides. Analysis of the assemblies by sequence similarity to known virus families yielded 115 novel virus sequences, and evidence supports a functional status for at least 86 of the novel viral contigs. Important monophyletic virus clades in the Bunyavirales and Mononegavirales orders were found in these Anopheles from Africa and Asia. The remaining non-host RNA assemblies that were unclassified by sequence similarity to known viruses were clustered by small RNA profiles, and 39 high-quality independent contigs strongly matched a pattern of classic RNAi processing of viral replication intermediates, suggesting they are entirely undescribed viruses. One thousand five hundred sixty-six additional high-quality unclassified contigs matched a pattern consistent with Piwi-interacting RNAs (piRNAs), suggesting that strand-biased piRNAs are generated from the natural virome in Anopheles. To functionally query piRNA effect, we analyzed piRNA expression in Anopheles coluzzii after infection with O’nyong nyong virus (family Togaviridae), and identified two piRNAs that appear to display specifically altered abundance upon arbovirus infection.ConclusionsAnopheles vectors of human malaria in Africa and Asia are ubiquitously colonized by RNA viruses, some of which are monophyletic but clearly diverged from other arthropod viruses. The interplay between small RNA pathways, immunity, and the virome may represent part of the homeostatic mechanism maintaining virome members in a commensal or nonpathogenic state, and could potentially influence vector competence.

Highlights

  • Mosquitoes are colonized by a large but mostly uncharacterized natural virome of RNA viruses, and the composition and distribution of the natural RNA virome may influence the biology and immunity of Anopheles malaria vector populations

  • Elevated rates of human blood-feeding by a mosquito species is a prerequisite for malaria vectorial capacity [13], and the main Anopheles species sampled for virome discovery in this study display consistently high levels of human contact in nature

  • Because of the strong strand bias of small RNAs observed, this pattern could correspond to degradation products of virus RNAs, alternatively, there appears to be size enrichment in the 27–28 nt size peaks characteristic of PIWI-interacting RNAs, and we examine this possibility below using bioinformatic and functional analyses

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Summary

Introduction

Mosquitoes are colonized by a large but mostly uncharacterized natural virome of RNA viruses, and the composition and distribution of the natural RNA virome may influence the biology and immunity of Anopheles malaria vector populations. A recent review found reports of at least 51 viruses naturally associated with Anopheles [2], and Anopheles mosquitoes harbor a diverse natural virome of RNA viruses [4,5,6,7]. These viruses are comprised mainly of insect specific viruses (ISVs) thought to multiply only in insects, and includes relatives of arboviruses that can replicate in both insects and vertebrate cells. Anopheles viruses have been discovered by isolation from cultured cells exposed to mosquito extract, serology, specific amplification and sequencing, and more recently, deep sequencing and de novo assembly [2]. Culicine mosquitoes in the genera Aedes and Culex transmit multiple arboviruses such as dengue virus (DENV, family Flaviviridae) Zika virus (ZIKV, family Flaviviridae), chikungunya virus (CHIKV, family Togaviridae) and others, but do not transmit human malaria

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