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Driving mosquito refractoriness to Plasmodium falciparum with engineered symbiotic bacteria.


ABSTRACT: The huge burden of malaria in developing countries urgently demands the development of novel approaches to fight this deadly disease. Although engineered symbiotic bacteria have been shown to render mosquitoes resistant to the parasite, the challenge remains to effectively introduce such bacteria into mosquito populations. We describe a Serratia bacterium strain (AS1) isolated from Anopheles ovaries that stably colonizes the mosquito midgut, female ovaries, and male accessory glands and spreads rapidly throughout mosquito populations. Serratia AS1 was genetically engineered for secretion of anti-Plasmodium effector proteins, and the recombinant strains inhibit development of Plasmodium falciparum in mosquitoes.

SUBMITTER: Wang S 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC9793889 | biostudies-literature | 2017 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Driving mosquito refractoriness to <i>Plasmodium falciparum</i> with engineered symbiotic bacteria.

Wang Sibao S   Dos-Santos André L A ALA   Huang Wei W   Liu Kun Connie KC   Oshaghi Mohammad Ali MA   Wei Ge G   Agre Peter P   Jacobs-Lorena Marcelo M  

Science (New York, N.Y.) 20170928 6358


The huge burden of malaria in developing countries urgently demands the development of novel approaches to fight this deadly disease. Although engineered symbiotic bacteria have been shown to render mosquitoes resistant to the parasite, the challenge remains to effectively introduce such bacteria into mosquito populations. We describe a <i>Serratia</i> bacterium strain (AS1) isolated from <i>Anopheles</i> ovaries that stably colonizes the mosquito midgut, female ovaries, and male accessory gland  ...[more]

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