Mosquito Microbiomes of Rwanda: Characterizing Mosquito Host and Microbial Communities in the Land of a Thousand Hills
Male
0301 basic medicine
Serratia
Bacteria
Research
Microbiota
Rwanda
High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing
Mosquito Vectors
Electron Transport Complex IV
03 medical and health sciences
Culicidae
RNA, Ribosomal, 16S
Animals
Female
Wolbachia
DOI:
10.1007/s00248-024-02382-3
Publication Date:
2024-05-01T14:48:10Z
AUTHORS (9)
ABSTRACT
AbstractMosquitoes are a complex nuisance around the world and tropical countries bear the brunt of the burden of mosquito-borne diseases. Rwanda has had success in reducing malaria and some arboviral diseases over the last few years, but still faces challenges to elimination. By building our understanding of in situ mosquito communities in Rwanda at a disturbed, human-occupied site and at a natural, preserved site, we can build our understanding of natural mosquito microbiomes toward the goal of implementing novel microbial control methods. Here, we examined the composition of collected mosquitoes and their microbiomes at two diverse sites using Cytochrome c Oxidase I sequencing and 16S V4 high-throughput sequencing. The majority (36 of 40 species) of mosquitoes captured and characterized in this study are the first-known record of their species for Rwanda but have been characterized in other nations in East Africa. We found significant differences among mosquito genera and among species, but not between mosquito sexes or catch method. Bacteria of interest for arbovirus control, Asaia, Serratia, and Wolbachia, were found in abundance at both sites and varied greatly by species.
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