Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Makunin A., Korlevic P., Park N., Goodwin S., Waterhouse R. M., von Wyschetzki K., Jacob C. G., Davies R., Kwiatkowski D., St Laurent B., Ayala Diego, Lawniczak M. K. N. (2021). A targeted amplicon sequencing panel to simultaneously identify mosquito species and Plasmodium presence across the entire Anopheles genus. Molecular Ecology Resources, [Early access], [17 p.]. ISSN 1755-098X.

Titre du document
A targeted amplicon sequencing panel to simultaneously identify mosquito species and Plasmodium presence across the entire Anopheles genus
Année de publication
2021
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000663260600001
Auteurs
Makunin A., Korlevic P., Park N., Goodwin S., Waterhouse R. M., von Wyschetzki K., Jacob C. G., Davies R., Kwiatkowski D., St Laurent B., Ayala Diego, Lawniczak M. K. N.
Source
Molecular Ecology Resources, 2021, [Early access], [17 p.] ISSN 1755-098X
Anopheles is a diverse genus of mosquitoes comprising over 500 described species, including all known human malaria vectors. While a limited number of key vector species have been studied in detail, the goal of malaria elimination calls for surveillance of all potential vector species. Here, we develop a multilocus amplicon sequencing approach that targets 62 highly variable loci in the Anopheles genome and two conserved loci in the Plasmodium mitochondrion, simultaneously revealing both the mosquito species and whether that mosquito carries malaria parasites. We also develop a cheap, nondestructive, and high-throughput DNA extraction workflow that provides template DNA from single mosquitoes for the multiplex PCR, which means specimens producing unexpected results can be returned to for morphological examination. Over 1000 individual mosquitoes can be sequenced in a single MiSeq run, and we demonstrate the panel's power to assign species identity using sequencing data for 40 species from Africa, Southeast Asia, and South America. We also show that the approach can be used to resolve geographic population structure within An. gambiae and An. coluzzii populations, as the population structure determined based on these 62 loci from over 1000 mosquitoes closely mirrors that revealed through whole genome sequencing. The end-to-end approach is quick, inexpensive, robust, and accurate, which makes it a promising technique for very large-scale mosquito genetic surveillance and vector control.
Plan de classement
Entomologie médicale / Parasitologie / Virologie [052]
Description Géographique
GABON ; CAMBODGE ; BRESIL
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010082164]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010082164
Contact