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Revisiting the Plasmodium sporozoite inoculum and elucidating the efficiency with which malaria parasites progress through the mosquito

Sachie Kanatani (), Deborah Stiffler, Teun Bousema, Gayane Yenokyan and Photini Sinnis ()
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Sachie Kanatani: Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Deborah Stiffler: Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Teun Bousema: Radboud University Medical Center
Gayane Yenokyan: Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Photini Sinnis: Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

Nature Communications, 2024, vol. 15, issue 1, 1-13

Abstract: Abstract Malaria is initiated when infected anopheline mosquitoes inoculate sporozoites as they probe for blood. It is thought that all infected mosquitoes are equivalent in terms of their infectious potential, with parasite burden having no role in transmission success. In this study, using mosquitoes harboring the entire range of salivary gland sporozoite loads observed in the field, we demonstrate a strong and highly significant correlation between mosquito parasite burden and inoculum size. We then link the inoculum data to oocyst counts, the most commonly-used metric to assess mosquito infection in the field, and determine the efficiency with which oocyst sporozoites enter mosquito salivary glands. Taken together our data support the conclusion that mosquitoes with higher parasite burdens are more likely to initiate infection and contribute to onward transmission. Overall these data may account for some of the unexplained heterogeneity in transmission and enable more precise benchmarks for transmission-blocking interventions.

Date: 2024
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DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-44962-4

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