气味
生物
冈比亚按蚊
咬人
寄主(生物学)
嗅觉
动物
生态学
疟疾
神经科学
免疫学
作者
Diego Giraldo,Stephanie Rankin‐Turner,Abel Corver,Genevieve M. Tauxe,Anne L. Gao,Dorian M. Jackson,Limonty Simubali,Christopher Book,Jennifer Stevenson,Philip E. Thuma,Rajiv C. McCoy,Andrew Gordus,Monicah M. Mburu,Edgar Simulundu,Conor J. McMeniman
出处
期刊:Current Biology
[Elsevier]
日期:2023-06-01
卷期号:33 (12): 2367-2382.e7
被引量:9
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.cub.2023.04.050
摘要
The African malaria mosquito Anopheles gambiae exhibits a strong innate drive to seek out humans in its sensory environment, classically entering homes to land on human skin in the hours flanking midnight. To gain insight into the role that olfactory cues emanating from the human body play in generating this epidemiologically important behavior, we developed a large-scale multi-choice preference assay in Zambia with infrared motion vision under semi-field conditions. We determined that An. gambiae prefers to land on arrayed visual targets warmed to human skin temperature during the nighttime when they are baited with carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions reflective of a large human over background air, body odor from one human over CO2, and the scent of one sleeping human over another. Applying integrative whole body volatilomics to multiple humans tested simultaneously in competition in a six-choice assay, we reveal high attractiveness is associated with whole body odor profiles from humans with increased relative abundances of the volatile carboxylic acids butyric acid, isobutryic acid, and isovaleric acid, and the skin microbe-generated methyl ketone acetoin. Conversely, those least preferred had whole body odor that was depleted of carboxylic acids among other compounds and enriched with the monoterpenoid eucalyptol. Across expansive spatial scales, heated targets without CO2 or whole body odor were minimally or not attractive at all to An. gambiae. These results indicate that human scent acts critically to guide thermotaxis and host selection by this prolific malaria vector as it navigates towards humans, yielding intrinsic heterogeneity in human biting risk.
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