Effect of temperature and insecticide stresses on Aedes aegypti larvae and their influence on the susceptibility of mosquitoes to dengue-2 virus

ISSN: 26975718
25Citations
Citations of this article
64Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Two major factors, higher temperatures and the application of insecticides, can drastically alter the genetic structure of a vector mosquito population. Due to these two stresses, the majority of the population gets wiped out, but the ones that withstand the stress and survive are likely to pass on survivability, and have an altered physiology. Our study shows that exposures to higher temperatures and DDT during the larval stage affects their susceptibility as adult mosquitoes to the DEN-2 virus. The overall transcription and translation status of heat shock protein (Hsp70) in virus high- and low-susceptible was the same as that in other batches. In the case of a DDT-resistant (R-7) strain two bands were obtained during RT-PCRs after heat shock. These two alleles were obtained only with HY-1 in which R-7 males were used for the crosses, suggesting that the second allele is probably male sex linked. The higher expression of Hsp70 may provide DDT-resistant strains a better chance of survival high temperature environments, particularly in homozygotes and hybrids. It was also interesting to note that these strains have a significantly lower susceptibility to the virus. Wide-spread DDT-resistance and a rise in temperature above the average temperature during summer may result in a population with a low susceptibility to the virus. Several families of heat shock proteins are known to be expressed in mosquitoes, and may have a cumulative role in determining susceptibility to the virus, which itself is governed by several genes.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Yadav, P., Barde, P. V., Gokhale, M. D., Vipat, V., Mishra, A. C., Pal, J. K., & Mourya, D. T. (2005). Effect of temperature and insecticide stresses on Aedes aegypti larvae and their influence on the susceptibility of mosquitoes to dengue-2 virus. Southeast Asian Journal of Tropical Medicine and Public Health, 36(5), 1139–1144.

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free