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Natural malaria infection in anophelines vectors and their incrimination in local malaria transmission in Darién, Panama

BACKGROUND: More than 85% of the malaria cases in Panama occur in poor, rural and indigenous regions like Darien Province. Vector diversity, infection rate and spatial distribution are important entomological parameters of malaria transmission dynamics. Their understanding is crucial for the develop...

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Autores principales: Torres-Cosme, Rolando, Rigg, Chystrie, Santamaría, Ana María, Vásquez, Vanessa, Victoria, Carlos, Ramirez, José Luis, Calzada, José E., Cáceres Carrera, Lorenzo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8092770/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33939707
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0250059
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author Torres-Cosme, Rolando
Rigg, Chystrie
Santamaría, Ana María
Vásquez, Vanessa
Victoria, Carlos
Ramirez, José Luis
Calzada, José E.
Cáceres Carrera, Lorenzo
author_facet Torres-Cosme, Rolando
Rigg, Chystrie
Santamaría, Ana María
Vásquez, Vanessa
Victoria, Carlos
Ramirez, José Luis
Calzada, José E.
Cáceres Carrera, Lorenzo
author_sort Torres-Cosme, Rolando
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: More than 85% of the malaria cases in Panama occur in poor, rural and indigenous regions like Darien Province. Vector diversity, infection rate and spatial distribution are important entomological parameters of malaria transmission dynamics. Their understanding is crucial for the development of effective disease control strategies. The objective of this study was to determine the composition of Anopheles species, their natural infection rate and their geographic distribution to better understand the malaria transmission dynamics in Darién, Panama. METHODS: Anophelines mosquitoes were captured during the rainy and dry season of 2016. We selected five communities where adult anophelines were collected using CDC light-traps, and through protective human-baited traps. Detection of natural infection and Plasmodium genotype were detected via nested PCR through the amplification of ssrRNA and the circumsporozoite protein gene (csp), respectively. RESULTS: A total of 1,063 mosquitoes were collected mosquitoes were collected for the detection of natural infection with Plasmodium spp. Nine Anophelines species were identified, with the predominant species being: An. (Nys.) darlingi (45.0%) and An. (Nys.) albimanus (42.6%). Natural infection in An. (Nys.) albimanus with P. vivax was detected in one mosquito pool from the community Pueblo Tortuga (0.6%), three from Marraganti (1.7%), two from Bajo Chiquito (1.1%) and three pools from Alto Playona 3 (1.7%). For An. (Nys.) darlingi mosquitoes, we detected seven positive pools from the community Bajo Chiquito (4.0%), two pools from Marraganti (1.1%) and two pools from Alto Playona (1.1%). The P. vivax allelic variant VK210 was detected in infected mosquitoes. CONCLUSION: The results from this study provide new information on the transmission dynamics associated with anophelines vectors in the Darién region. This is the first report of natural P. vivax infection in An. (Nys.) darlingi and its incrimination as a potential malaria vector in this region of Panama. Additional studies are necessary to expand our knowledge and determine crucial parameters in malaria transmission in Darién, which in turn will aid the National Malaria Program in attaining an adequate malaria control strategy towards malaria elimination.
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spelling pubmed-80927702021-05-07 Natural malaria infection in anophelines vectors and their incrimination in local malaria transmission in Darién, Panama Torres-Cosme, Rolando Rigg, Chystrie Santamaría, Ana María Vásquez, Vanessa Victoria, Carlos Ramirez, José Luis Calzada, José E. Cáceres Carrera, Lorenzo PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: More than 85% of the malaria cases in Panama occur in poor, rural and indigenous regions like Darien Province. Vector diversity, infection rate and spatial distribution are important entomological parameters of malaria transmission dynamics. Their understanding is crucial for the development of effective disease control strategies. The objective of this study was to determine the composition of Anopheles species, their natural infection rate and their geographic distribution to better understand the malaria transmission dynamics in Darién, Panama. METHODS: Anophelines mosquitoes were captured during the rainy and dry season of 2016. We selected five communities where adult anophelines were collected using CDC light-traps, and through protective human-baited traps. Detection of natural infection and Plasmodium genotype were detected via nested PCR through the amplification of ssrRNA and the circumsporozoite protein gene (csp), respectively. RESULTS: A total of 1,063 mosquitoes were collected mosquitoes were collected for the detection of natural infection with Plasmodium spp. Nine Anophelines species were identified, with the predominant species being: An. (Nys.) darlingi (45.0%) and An. (Nys.) albimanus (42.6%). Natural infection in An. (Nys.) albimanus with P. vivax was detected in one mosquito pool from the community Pueblo Tortuga (0.6%), three from Marraganti (1.7%), two from Bajo Chiquito (1.1%) and three pools from Alto Playona 3 (1.7%). For An. (Nys.) darlingi mosquitoes, we detected seven positive pools from the community Bajo Chiquito (4.0%), two pools from Marraganti (1.1%) and two pools from Alto Playona (1.1%). The P. vivax allelic variant VK210 was detected in infected mosquitoes. CONCLUSION: The results from this study provide new information on the transmission dynamics associated with anophelines vectors in the Darién region. This is the first report of natural P. vivax infection in An. (Nys.) darlingi and its incrimination as a potential malaria vector in this region of Panama. Additional studies are necessary to expand our knowledge and determine crucial parameters in malaria transmission in Darién, which in turn will aid the National Malaria Program in attaining an adequate malaria control strategy towards malaria elimination. Public Library of Science 2021-05-03 /pmc/articles/PMC8092770/ /pubmed/33939707 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0250059 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Torres-Cosme, Rolando
Rigg, Chystrie
Santamaría, Ana María
Vásquez, Vanessa
Victoria, Carlos
Ramirez, José Luis
Calzada, José E.
Cáceres Carrera, Lorenzo
Natural malaria infection in anophelines vectors and their incrimination in local malaria transmission in Darién, Panama
title Natural malaria infection in anophelines vectors and their incrimination in local malaria transmission in Darién, Panama
title_full Natural malaria infection in anophelines vectors and their incrimination in local malaria transmission in Darién, Panama
title_fullStr Natural malaria infection in anophelines vectors and their incrimination in local malaria transmission in Darién, Panama
title_full_unstemmed Natural malaria infection in anophelines vectors and their incrimination in local malaria transmission in Darién, Panama
title_short Natural malaria infection in anophelines vectors and their incrimination in local malaria transmission in Darién, Panama
title_sort natural malaria infection in anophelines vectors and their incrimination in local malaria transmission in darién, panama
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8092770/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33939707
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0250059
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