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Anopheles sundaicus  complex and the presence of Anopheles epiroticus in Indonesia

Anopheles sundaicus s.l. is an important malaria vector primarily found in coastal landscapes of western and central Indonesia. The species complex has a wide geographical distribution in South and Southeast Asia and exhibits ecological and behavioural variability over its range. Studies on understa...

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Autores principales: Syafruddin, Din, Lestari, Yulia E., Permana, Dendi H., Asih, Puji B. S., St. Laurent, Brandyce, Zubaidah, Siti, Rozi, Ismail E., Kosasih, Sully, Shinta, Sukowati, Supratman, Hakim, Lukman, Haryanto, Edhi, Mangunwardoyo, Wibowo, Bangs, Michael J., Lobo, Neil F.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7363104/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32614914
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0008385
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author Syafruddin, Din
Lestari, Yulia E.
Permana, Dendi H.
Asih, Puji B. S.
St. Laurent, Brandyce
Zubaidah, Siti
Rozi, Ismail E.
Kosasih, Sully
Shinta,
Sukowati, Supratman
Hakim, Lukman
Haryanto, Edhi
Mangunwardoyo, Wibowo
Bangs, Michael J.
Lobo, Neil F.
author_facet Syafruddin, Din
Lestari, Yulia E.
Permana, Dendi H.
Asih, Puji B. S.
St. Laurent, Brandyce
Zubaidah, Siti
Rozi, Ismail E.
Kosasih, Sully
Shinta,
Sukowati, Supratman
Hakim, Lukman
Haryanto, Edhi
Mangunwardoyo, Wibowo
Bangs, Michael J.
Lobo, Neil F.
author_sort Syafruddin, Din
collection PubMed
description Anopheles sundaicus s.l. is an important malaria vector primarily found in coastal landscapes of western and central Indonesia. The species complex has a wide geographical distribution in South and Southeast Asia and exhibits ecological and behavioural variability over its range. Studies on understanding the distribution of different members in the complex and their bionomics related to malaria transmission might be important guiding more effective vector intervention strategies. Female An. sundaicus s.l. were collected from seven provinces, 12 locations in Indonesia representing Sumatra: North Sumatra, Bangka-Belitung, South Lampung, and Bengkulu; in Java: West Java; and the Lesser Sunda Islands: West Nusa Tenggara and East Nusa Tenggara provinces. Sequencing of ribosomal DNA ITS2 gene fragments and two mitochondrial DNA gene markers, COI and cytb, enabled molecular identification of morphologically indistinguishable members of the complex. Findings allowed inference on the distribution of the An. sundaicus s.l. present in Indonesia and further illustrate the phylogenetic relationships of An. epiroticus within the complex. A total of 370 An. sundaicus s.l specimens were analysed for the ITS2 fragment. The ITS2 sequence alignment revealed two consistent species-specific point mutations, a T>C transition at base 479 and a G>T transversion at base 538 that differentiated five haplotypes: TG, CG, TT, CT, and TY. The TG haplotype matched published An. epiroticus–indicative sequences from Thailand, Vietnam and peninsular Malaysia. The previously described insertion event (base 603) was observed in all identified specimens. Analysis of the COI and cytb genes revealed no consistent nucleotide variations that could definitively distinguish An. epiroticus from other members in the Sundaicus Complex. The findings indicate and support the existence of An. epiroticus in North Sumatra and Bangka-Belitung archipelago. Further studies are recommended to determine the full distributional extent of the Sundaicus complex in Indonesia and investigate the role of these species in malaria transmission.
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spelling pubmed-73631042020-07-27 Anopheles sundaicus  complex and the presence of Anopheles epiroticus in Indonesia Syafruddin, Din Lestari, Yulia E. Permana, Dendi H. Asih, Puji B. S. St. Laurent, Brandyce Zubaidah, Siti Rozi, Ismail E. Kosasih, Sully Shinta, Sukowati, Supratman Hakim, Lukman Haryanto, Edhi Mangunwardoyo, Wibowo Bangs, Michael J. Lobo, Neil F. PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article Anopheles sundaicus s.l. is an important malaria vector primarily found in coastal landscapes of western and central Indonesia. The species complex has a wide geographical distribution in South and Southeast Asia and exhibits ecological and behavioural variability over its range. Studies on understanding the distribution of different members in the complex and their bionomics related to malaria transmission might be important guiding more effective vector intervention strategies. Female An. sundaicus s.l. were collected from seven provinces, 12 locations in Indonesia representing Sumatra: North Sumatra, Bangka-Belitung, South Lampung, and Bengkulu; in Java: West Java; and the Lesser Sunda Islands: West Nusa Tenggara and East Nusa Tenggara provinces. Sequencing of ribosomal DNA ITS2 gene fragments and two mitochondrial DNA gene markers, COI and cytb, enabled molecular identification of morphologically indistinguishable members of the complex. Findings allowed inference on the distribution of the An. sundaicus s.l. present in Indonesia and further illustrate the phylogenetic relationships of An. epiroticus within the complex. A total of 370 An. sundaicus s.l specimens were analysed for the ITS2 fragment. The ITS2 sequence alignment revealed two consistent species-specific point mutations, a T>C transition at base 479 and a G>T transversion at base 538 that differentiated five haplotypes: TG, CG, TT, CT, and TY. The TG haplotype matched published An. epiroticus–indicative sequences from Thailand, Vietnam and peninsular Malaysia. The previously described insertion event (base 603) was observed in all identified specimens. Analysis of the COI and cytb genes revealed no consistent nucleotide variations that could definitively distinguish An. epiroticus from other members in the Sundaicus Complex. The findings indicate and support the existence of An. epiroticus in North Sumatra and Bangka-Belitung archipelago. Further studies are recommended to determine the full distributional extent of the Sundaicus complex in Indonesia and investigate the role of these species in malaria transmission. Public Library of Science 2020-07-02 /pmc/articles/PMC7363104/ /pubmed/32614914 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0008385 Text en © 2020 Syafruddin et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://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
Syafruddin, Din
Lestari, Yulia E.
Permana, Dendi H.
Asih, Puji B. S.
St. Laurent, Brandyce
Zubaidah, Siti
Rozi, Ismail E.
Kosasih, Sully
Shinta,
Sukowati, Supratman
Hakim, Lukman
Haryanto, Edhi
Mangunwardoyo, Wibowo
Bangs, Michael J.
Lobo, Neil F.
Anopheles sundaicus  complex and the presence of Anopheles epiroticus in Indonesia
title Anopheles sundaicus  complex and the presence of Anopheles epiroticus in Indonesia
title_full Anopheles sundaicus  complex and the presence of Anopheles epiroticus in Indonesia
title_fullStr Anopheles sundaicus  complex and the presence of Anopheles epiroticus in Indonesia
title_full_unstemmed Anopheles sundaicus  complex and the presence of Anopheles epiroticus in Indonesia
title_short Anopheles sundaicus  complex and the presence of Anopheles epiroticus in Indonesia
title_sort anopheles sundaicus  complex and the presence of anopheles epiroticus in indonesia
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7363104/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32614914
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0008385
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