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Aedes aegypti gut transcriptomes respond differently to microbiome transplants from field‐caught or laboratory‐reared mosquitoes

Hegde, Shivanand; Brettell, Laura E.; Quek, Shannon; Etebari, Kayvan; Saldaña, Miguel A.; Asgari, Sassan; Coon, Kerri L.; Heinz, Eva; Hughes, Grant L.

Aedes aegypti gut transcriptomes respond differently to microbiome transplants from field‐caught or laboratory‐reared mosquitoes Thumbnail


Authors

Shivanand Hegde

Laura E. Brettell

Shannon Quek

Kayvan Etebari

Miguel A. Saldaña

Sassan Asgari

Kerri L. Coon

Eva Heinz

Grant L. Hughes



Abstract

The mosquito microbiome is critical for host development and plays a major role in many aspects of mosquito biology. While the microbiome is commonly dominated by a small number of genera, there is considerable variation in composition among mosquito species, life stages, and geography. How the host controls and is affected by this variation is unclear. Using microbiome transplant experiments, we asked whether there were differences in transcriptional responses when mosquitoes of different species were used as microbiome donors. We used microbiomes from four different donor species spanning the phylogenetic breadth of the Culicidae, collected either from the laboratory or the field. We found that when recipients received a microbiome from a donor reared in the laboratory, the response was remarkably similar regardless of donor species. However, when the donor had been collected from the field, many more genes were differentially expressed. We also found that while the transplant procedure did have some effect on the host transcriptome, this is likely to have had a limited effect on mosquito fitness. Overall, our results highlight the possibility that variation in mosquito microbiome communities is associated with variability in host–microbiome interactions and further demonstrate the utility of the microbiome transplantation technique for investigating host–microbe interactions in mosquitoes.

Citation

Hegde, S., Brettell, L. E., Quek, S., Etebari, K., Saldaña, M. A., Asgari, S., …Hughes, G. L. (2024). Aedes aegypti gut transcriptomes respond differently to microbiome transplants from field‐caught or laboratory‐reared mosquitoes. Environmental Microbiology, e16576. https://doi.org/10.1111/1462-2920.16576

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Dec 21, 2023
Online Publication Date Jan 8, 2024
Publication Date Jan 8, 2024
Deposit Date Jan 9, 2024
Publicly Available Date Jan 9, 2025
Journal Environmental Microbiology
Print ISSN 1462-2912
Publisher Wiley
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Pages e16576
DOI https://doi.org/10.1111/1462-2920.16576

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