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Bacterial community structure of Anopheles hyrcanus group, Anopheles nivipes, Anopheles philippinensis, and Anopheles vagus from a malaria-endemic area in Thailand

Bacterial content of mosquitoes has given rise to the development of innovative tools that influence and seek to control malaria transmission. This study identified the bacterial microbiota in field-collected female adults of the Anopheles hyrcanus group and three Anopheles species, Anopheles nivipe...

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Autores principales: Boonroumkaew, Patcharaporn, Rodpai, Rutchanee, Saeung, Atiporn, Aupalee, Kittipat, Saingamsook, Jassada, Poolphol, Petchaboon, Sadaow, Lakkhana, Sanpool, Oranuch, Janwan, Penchom, Thanchomnang, Tongjit, Intapan, Pewpan M., Maleewong, Wanchai
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10434920/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37590198
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0289733
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author Boonroumkaew, Patcharaporn
Rodpai, Rutchanee
Saeung, Atiporn
Aupalee, Kittipat
Saingamsook, Jassada
Poolphol, Petchaboon
Sadaow, Lakkhana
Sanpool, Oranuch
Janwan, Penchom
Thanchomnang, Tongjit
Intapan, Pewpan M.
Maleewong, Wanchai
author_facet Boonroumkaew, Patcharaporn
Rodpai, Rutchanee
Saeung, Atiporn
Aupalee, Kittipat
Saingamsook, Jassada
Poolphol, Petchaboon
Sadaow, Lakkhana
Sanpool, Oranuch
Janwan, Penchom
Thanchomnang, Tongjit
Intapan, Pewpan M.
Maleewong, Wanchai
author_sort Boonroumkaew, Patcharaporn
collection PubMed
description Bacterial content of mosquitoes has given rise to the development of innovative tools that influence and seek to control malaria transmission. This study identified the bacterial microbiota in field-collected female adults of the Anopheles hyrcanus group and three Anopheles species, Anopheles nivipes, Anopheles philippinensis, and Anopheles vagus, from an endemic area in the southeastern part of Ubon Ratchathani Province, northeastern Thailand, near the Lao PDR-Cambodia-Thailand border. A total of 17 DNA libraries were generated from pooled female Anopheles abdomen samples (10 abdomens/ sample). The mosquito microbiota was characterized through the analysis of DNA sequences from the V3−V4 regions of the 16S rRNA gene, and data were analyzed in QIIME2. A total of 3,442 bacterial ASVs were obtained, revealing differences in the microbiota both within the same species/group and between different species/group. Statistical difference in alpha diversity was observed between An. hyrcanus group and An. vagus and between An. nivipes and An. vagus, and beta diversity analyses showed that the bacterial community of An. vagus was the most dissimilar from other species. The most abundant bacteria belonged to the Proteobacteria phylum (48%-75%) in which Pseudomonas, Serratia, and Pantoea were predominant genera among four Anopheles species/group. However, the most significantly abundant genus observed in each Anopheles species/group was as follows: Staphylococcus in the An. hyrcanus group, Pantoea in the An. nivipes, Rosenbergiella in An. philippinensis, and Pseudomonas in An. vagus. Particularly, Pseudomonas sp. was highly abundant in all Anopheles species except An. nivipes. The present study provides the first study on the microbiota of four potential malaria vectors as a starting step towards understanding the role of the microbiota on mosquito biology and ultimately the development of potential tools for malaria control.
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spelling pubmed-104349202023-08-18 Bacterial community structure of Anopheles hyrcanus group, Anopheles nivipes, Anopheles philippinensis, and Anopheles vagus from a malaria-endemic area in Thailand Boonroumkaew, Patcharaporn Rodpai, Rutchanee Saeung, Atiporn Aupalee, Kittipat Saingamsook, Jassada Poolphol, Petchaboon Sadaow, Lakkhana Sanpool, Oranuch Janwan, Penchom Thanchomnang, Tongjit Intapan, Pewpan M. Maleewong, Wanchai PLoS One Research Article Bacterial content of mosquitoes has given rise to the development of innovative tools that influence and seek to control malaria transmission. This study identified the bacterial microbiota in field-collected female adults of the Anopheles hyrcanus group and three Anopheles species, Anopheles nivipes, Anopheles philippinensis, and Anopheles vagus, from an endemic area in the southeastern part of Ubon Ratchathani Province, northeastern Thailand, near the Lao PDR-Cambodia-Thailand border. A total of 17 DNA libraries were generated from pooled female Anopheles abdomen samples (10 abdomens/ sample). The mosquito microbiota was characterized through the analysis of DNA sequences from the V3−V4 regions of the 16S rRNA gene, and data were analyzed in QIIME2. A total of 3,442 bacterial ASVs were obtained, revealing differences in the microbiota both within the same species/group and between different species/group. Statistical difference in alpha diversity was observed between An. hyrcanus group and An. vagus and between An. nivipes and An. vagus, and beta diversity analyses showed that the bacterial community of An. vagus was the most dissimilar from other species. The most abundant bacteria belonged to the Proteobacteria phylum (48%-75%) in which Pseudomonas, Serratia, and Pantoea were predominant genera among four Anopheles species/group. However, the most significantly abundant genus observed in each Anopheles species/group was as follows: Staphylococcus in the An. hyrcanus group, Pantoea in the An. nivipes, Rosenbergiella in An. philippinensis, and Pseudomonas in An. vagus. Particularly, Pseudomonas sp. was highly abundant in all Anopheles species except An. nivipes. The present study provides the first study on the microbiota of four potential malaria vectors as a starting step towards understanding the role of the microbiota on mosquito biology and ultimately the development of potential tools for malaria control. Public Library of Science 2023-08-17 /pmc/articles/PMC10434920/ /pubmed/37590198 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0289733 Text en © 2023 Boonroumkaew et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Boonroumkaew, Patcharaporn
Rodpai, Rutchanee
Saeung, Atiporn
Aupalee, Kittipat
Saingamsook, Jassada
Poolphol, Petchaboon
Sadaow, Lakkhana
Sanpool, Oranuch
Janwan, Penchom
Thanchomnang, Tongjit
Intapan, Pewpan M.
Maleewong, Wanchai
Bacterial community structure of Anopheles hyrcanus group, Anopheles nivipes, Anopheles philippinensis, and Anopheles vagus from a malaria-endemic area in Thailand
title Bacterial community structure of Anopheles hyrcanus group, Anopheles nivipes, Anopheles philippinensis, and Anopheles vagus from a malaria-endemic area in Thailand
title_full Bacterial community structure of Anopheles hyrcanus group, Anopheles nivipes, Anopheles philippinensis, and Anopheles vagus from a malaria-endemic area in Thailand
title_fullStr Bacterial community structure of Anopheles hyrcanus group, Anopheles nivipes, Anopheles philippinensis, and Anopheles vagus from a malaria-endemic area in Thailand
title_full_unstemmed Bacterial community structure of Anopheles hyrcanus group, Anopheles nivipes, Anopheles philippinensis, and Anopheles vagus from a malaria-endemic area in Thailand
title_short Bacterial community structure of Anopheles hyrcanus group, Anopheles nivipes, Anopheles philippinensis, and Anopheles vagus from a malaria-endemic area in Thailand
title_sort bacterial community structure of anopheles hyrcanus group, anopheles nivipes, anopheles philippinensis, and anopheles vagus from a malaria-endemic area in thailand
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10434920/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37590198
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0289733
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