Abstract

Reduction in total salivary gland protein from four anopheline vectors of human malaria, Anopheles stephensi Liston, An. albimanus Wiedmann, An. gambiae Giles, and An. freeborni Aitken, was quantified after mosquitoes blood-fed to repletion on human volunteers, hamsters or through a Baudruche artificial membrane. Total salivary gland protein from pools of six unfed mosquitoes ranged from 4.33 to 7.91 micrograms/ml. The difference between the total protein of glands from unfed and blood-fed mosquitoes for all species ranged from 1.77 to 3.12 (micrograms/ml for six pooled salivary glands. Total salivary gland protein for mosquitoes blood-fed to repletion was significantly less than that of unfed controls from the same cohort. Reduction in total salivary gland protein for An. freeborni and An stephensi blood fed to repletion on human volunteers, hamsters, and a Baudruche membrane ranged from 24 to 46%, from 43 to 56%, and from 24 to 51%, respectively. An. stephensi mosquitoes were allowed to blood feed on humans for 0 (unfed), 0.5-, 1.0-, 2.0-min time periods or to repletion (> 2-5 min). As feeding time increased, there was a significant decrease in total amount of protein in the salivary glands. This decrease was proportional over time, indicating that salivation occurred continuously from the beginning (probing) of blood feeding to withdrawal of the mosquito mouthparts at repletion. These data indicate that during blood feeding there difference between species in the salivary gland output measured as amount of protein depleted from the salivary glands and that depletion of salivary protein from the glands occurred continuously as mosquitoes fed to repletion.

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