Sterilising effects of pyriproxyfen on Anopheles arabiensis and its potential use in malaria control.

Caroline Harris, Dickson Lwetoijera, Stefan Dongus, N S Matowo, L M Lorenz, G J Devine, Silas Majambere

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

58 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Insecticide resistance poses a major threat to current vector control campaigns. Insecticides with novel modes of action are therefore in high demand. Pyriproxyfen (PPF), a conventional mosquito pupacide, has a unique mode of action that also sterilises adult mosquitoes (unable to produce viable offspring) upon direct contact. However, the timing of PPF exposure in relation to when mosquitoes take a blood meal has an important impact on that sterilisation. This study investigated the relationship between different blood feeding and PPF exposure timings to determine the potential of PPF sterilisation in controlling Anopheles arabiensis.

METHODS

Four treatment regimens were investigated: blood fed three days before PPF exposure (A), blood fed one day before PPF exposure (B), blood fed one day after PPF exposure (C) and blood fed three days after PPF exposure (D) for their impact on egg laying (fecundity) and the production of viable offspring (fertility), while the impact of PPF exposure on mosquito survival was investigated in the absence of a blood meal. All regimens and the survival study exposed mosquitoes to PPF via the bottle assay at 3mg AI/m2 for 30 minutes.

RESULTS

Female mosquitoes that blood-fed one day prior to PPF exposure (regimen B), produced no viable offspring during that gonotrophic cycle (100% reduction in fertility). All other treatments had no significant effect. The observed reductions in fecundity and fertility were caused by the retention of eggs (97% of eggs retained, i.e. produced in the ovaries but not laid, in regimen B, p = 0.0004). Some of these retained eggs were deformed in shape. PPF exposure on mosquito survival in the absence of a blood meal was found to have no effect.

CONCLUSIONS

The results presented here suggest that sterilising adult malaria vectors using PPF could form part of a malaria control strategy, taking advantage of the lack of reported resistance to PPF in mosquitoes and its unique mode of action. We propose that targeting resting mosquitoes, which are highly susceptible to PPF at low doses, is the optimal direction for developing this control tool.

Original languageEnglish
Article number144
Pages (from-to)e144
JournalParasites and Vectors
Volume6
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 17 May 2013

Keywords

  • Anopheles arabiensis
  • Pyriproxyfen
  • Sterilisation

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Sterilising effects of pyriproxyfen on Anopheles arabiensis and its potential use in malaria control.'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this