疟疾
生物
恶性疟原虫
病毒学
寄生虫寄主
中肠
寄主(生物学)
传输(电信)
微生物学
按蚊
抗体
疟原虫(生命周期)
免疫学
生态学
计算机科学
幼虫
植物
万维网
电气工程
工程类
作者
Biao He,Meilin Li,Shui Liang Guo,Feng Zhu,Zhiwei Jiao,Jianyong Li,Nie Tan,Shiming Jiao,Taiping Liu,Jian Zhang,Yongling Fan,Yuanli Gao,Taoli Zhou,Jian Li,Wei Huang,Lubin Jiang,Zurui Lin,Sibao Wang,Wenyue Xu
标识
DOI:10.1073/pnas.2424570122
摘要
Host-derived factors ingested during mosquito blood feeding are poorly understood modulators of malaria transmission. Here, we demonstrated that host complement C3, acquired by mosquitoes during Plasmodium infection, significantly enhanced rodent malaria infection in laboratory-reared mosquitoes. This effect was recapitulated in field-caught Anopheles sinensis mosquitoes, confirming its relevance to malaria transmission in a more natural setting. Moreover, host-derived C3 significantly reduced the efficacy of anti-Pfs25 antibodies in blocking malaria transmission. Mechanistically, host-derived C3 lyses the mosquito midgut symbiont Elizabethkingia anophelis ( E. anophelis )—a bacterium that intrinsically suppresses parasite development by blocking the zygote-to-ookinete transition. Strikingly, host-derived C3 in mosquitoes appears to be activated by the alternative pathway, and inhibiting Factor B with Iptacopan (LNP023) reduced Plasmodium falciparum ( P. falciparum ) infection, while increased the efficacy of anti-Pfs25 antibodies to blocking P. falciparum transmission in the standard membrane-feeding assay. Therefore, this study describes a strategy of the malaria parasite to utilize host complement C3 to promote its transmission and provides us with an avenue to block malaria transmission and improve the blocking efficacy of anti-Pfs25 antibodies by the inhibition of C3 activation.
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