Project description:Midgut is an important immune organ of Aedes aegypti. To help further studies on host-pathogen interaction of midgut, we established a midgut cell atlas using scRNA-seq.
Project description:Mosquitoes serve as medically significant vectors for transmitting various arboviruses. The mosquito midgut is both the digestive organ and primary infection site via viral bloodmeals, and the midgut cells show heterogeneity on virus-vector interactions. Rapidly developed single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) technologies allow to characterize midgut physiology and viral infection dynamics at cellular solution. At present, scRNA-seq studies about mosquito midgut cell atlas are still limited and lack established protocols for cellular isolation. Therefore, we developed and employed a compatible microwell-based scRNA-seq protocol on four important mosquito species including Aedes aegypti, Aedes albopictus, Culex pipiens pallens and Culex tritaeniorhynchus and successfully established their midgut cell atlases pre- and post-bloodmeal. Further, we performed scRNA-seq experiments on DENV-infected Ae. aegypti to characterize the viral infection dynamics at single-cell solution.
Project description:We used RNA-sequencing to identify differentially expressed genes in the midgut of Aedes aegypti that contribute to the field derivied dengue susceptible (Cali-S) and dengue refractory (Cali-R) phenotypes