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A Virulent Wolbachia Infection Decreases the Viability of the Dengue Vector Aedes aegypti during Periods of Embryonic Quiescence

  • Conor J. McMeniman,

    Current address: Laboratory of Neurogenetics and Behavior, The Rockefeller University, New York, New York, United States of America

    Affiliation School of Biological Sciences, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Queensland, Australia

  • Scott L. O'Neill

    scott.oneill@uq.edu.au

    Affiliation School of Biological Sciences, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Queensland, Australia

Abstract

A new approach for dengue control has been proposed that relies on life-shortening strains of the obligate intracellular bacterium Wolbachia pipientis to modify mosquito population age structure and reduce pathogen transmission. Previously we reported the stable transinfection of the major dengue vector Aedes aegypti with a life-shortening Wolbachia strain (wMelPop-CLA) from the vinegar fly Drosophila melanogaster. Here, we report a further characterization of the phenotypic effects of this virulent Wolbachia infection on several life-history traits of Ae. aegypti. Minor costs of wMelPop-CLA infection for pre-imaginal survivorship, development and adult size were found. However, we discovered that the wMelPop-CLA infection dramatically decreased the viability of desiccated Ae. aegypti eggs over time. Similarly, the reproductive fitness of wMelPop-CLA infected Ae. aegypti females declined with age. These results reveal a general pattern associated with wMelPop-CLA induced pathogenesis in this mosquito species, where host fitness costs increase during aging of both immature and adult life-history stages. In addition to influencing the invasion dynamics of this particular Wolbachia strain, we suggest that the negative impact of wMelPop-CLA on embryonic quiescence may have applied utility as a tool to reduce mosquito population size in regions with pronounced dry seasons or in regions that experience cool winters.

Author Summary

A virulent strain of the vertically-inherited bacterium Wolbachia pipientis (wMelPop-CLA) from the vinegar fly Drosophila melanogaster has been established in the dengue vector Aedes aegypti as part of a biological strategy for dengue control. In this medically important disease vector, wMelPop-CLA infection shortens mosquito lifespan and effectively blocks dengue productivity within the mosquito – two powerful effects that could decrease the vectorial capacity of mosquito populations for transmission of dengue viruses. Here, we further characterize the phenotypic effects of wMelPop-CLA on several life-history traits of Ae. aegypti, and report that this infection influences the survival of this mosquito species during sustained periods of embryonic quiescence. From an applied perspective, we suggest that this novel phenotype may be a useful tool to reduce mosquito population size in regions where embryonic quiescence contributes towards survival of this species through seasonal changes in rainfall or temperature, and thus further reduce the probability of dengue transmission at the beginning of each wet season. This study also highlights key fitness parameters needed to accurately model invasion dynamics of this virulent Wolbachia strain.

Introduction

Aedes aegypti, the primary vector of dengue viruses throughout the tropics, is a mosquito species that has strong associations with human habitation [1]. In the past, control of dengue has been complicated by an inability to eradicate Ae. aegypti from urban environments and implement sustained vector control programs [2]. These challenges have highlighted the critical need for new approaches to curb a worldwide resurgence in dengue activity [3].

A novel approach for dengue control that has been proposed involves the introduction of the obligate intracellular bacterium Wolbachia pipientis into field populations of Ae. aegypti. Wolbachia are maternally inherited bacteria that naturally infect a wide diversity of invertebrate species [4], [5], and can rapidly spread through arthropod populations by manipulations to host reproduction such as cytoplasmic incompatibility [6]. Wolbachia infections could limit dengue transmission through two distinct mechanisms. The first by introducing Wolbachia strains that reduce the survival rate and associated vectorial capacity of the mosquito population [7], [8]. The second mechanism relies on the ability of some Wolbachia strains to interfere with the ability of RNA viruses to form productive infections in insects [9], [10] and potentially modulate the vector competence of Ae. aegypti for dengue viruses.

Towards this aim, we previously reported the stable transinfection of Ae. aegypti with a life-shortening Wolbachia strain wMelPop-CLA (a mosquito cell-line adapted isolate of wMelPop) [11], originally derived from the vinegar fly Drosophila melanogaster [12]. In this mosquito host, wMelPop-CLA has been shown to both reduce adult life span [11] and directly interfere with dengue virus infection [13], suggesting that this Wolbachia strain may have applied utility as a biological tool to reduce dengue transmission. However, prior to application in a field setting, a thorough understanding of any fitness effects that occur in wMelPop-CLA infected mosquitoes is required to accurately model infection dynamics and the impact of wMelPop-CLA on Ae. aegypti populations.

To further characterize this novel symbiosis and identify any fitness parameters likely to influence its spread throughout mosquito populations, we examined the phenotypic effects of wMelPop-CLA infection on several life-history traits across embryonic, pre-imaginal and adult stages of Ae. aegypti. We compared the developmental time and survivorship of pre-imaginal stages from infected and uninfected Ae. aegypti strains, and the effect of this infection on adult body size. We also considered the effect of wMelPop-CLA infection on embryonic viability during egg quiescence and reproductive fitness as mosquitoes age.

Methods

Ethics statement

The work reported in this manuscript used human volunteers for mosquito feeding as approved by the University of Queensland Human Ethics Committee - Approval 2007001379. Written consent was obtained from each participant used for blood feeding.

Mosquito strains and maintenance

wMelPop-CLA infected PGYP1 and tetracycline-cured PGYP1.tet strains of Ae. aegypti [11] were maintained at 25°C, 75–85% relative humidity, with a 12∶12 h light∶dark photoperiod. Larvae were reared in plastic trays (30×40×8 cm) at a set density of 150 larvae in 3 L distilled water, and fed 150 mg fish food (TetraMin Tropical Tablets, Tetra, Germany) per pan every day until pupation. Adults were kept in screened 30×30×30 cm cages, and provided with constant access to 10% sucrose solution and water. Females (5 days old) were blood-fed using human blood. For routine colony maintenance, eggs from PGYP1 were hatched 5–7 days post-oviposition (i.e. without prolonged desiccation) to initiate the next generation. All fitness experiments with PGYP1 were conducted at G20 to G22 post transinfection. The tetracycline-cured PGYP1.tet strain, generated at G8–G9 post-transinfection, was re-colonized with resident gut microflora from wild-type larvae as previously described [11].

Pre-imaginal development and survivorship

Eggs (120 h old) from PGYP1 and PGYP1.tet strains were hatched synchronously in nutrient-infused deoxygenated water for 1 h. After hatching, individual first instar larvae (n = 156 per strain) were placed into separate plastic 30 mL plastic cups with 20 mL of water, and fed 1 mg powdered TetraMin suspended in distilled water each day until pupation. The number of days spent in each pre-imaginal life stage (i.e., 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th instars, pupae), mortality at each stage, and sex of eclosing adults were recorded every 24 h. Stage-specific development and eclosion times for each strain were compared using Mann-Whitney U (MWU) tests conducted in Statistica Version 8 (StatSoft, Tulsa, OK).

Adult wing length measurements

As an indicator of adult body size, wing lengths of PGYP1 and PGYP1.tet mosquitoes (n = 50 of each sex) derived from the pre-imaginal development time assay were measured (distance from the axillary incision to the apical margin excluding the fringe of scales) [14]. Wing lengths of males and females from each strain were compared using MWU tests.

Lifetime productivity measurements

Individual PGYP1 and PGYP1.tet population cages (30×30×30 cm), each containing 200 males and 200 females per strain, were maintained over multiple gonotrophic cycles, with ad libitum access to 10% sucrose solution and water for the duration of their life span. During each cycle, females were provided with a human blood meal for 2×10 min periods on consecutive days, and 96 h post-blood meal a random sample of females (n = 48) was collected from each cage and isolated individually for oviposition. Following a set 24 h period for oviposition, females were returned to their respective cages and the proportion of females laying eggs determined. Eggs were conditioned and hatched 120 h post-oviposition as described above, and the total number of eggs (fecundity) and hatched larvae (fertility) from each female were recorded. To ensure that gravid females not sampled for oviposition could also lay eggs every cycle, oviposition cups were introduced into each stock cage (96 h post-blood meal) for a period of 48 h. Females were then blood fed to initiate the next gonotrophic cycle.

Cages were sampled until all females in the population were dead, which occurred after 7 and 16 gonotrophic cycles for PGYP1 and PGYP1.tet strains respectively. To ensure PGYP1.tet females did not become depleted of sperm, young males (3 days old) were supplemented to this cage after 8 gonotrophic cycles. Multiple linear regression analysis was used to detect trends in fecundity/fertility of mosquitoes from each strain over their lifespan. Student's t-test was used to compare the fecundity/fertility of mosquitoes from both strains of the same age.

Viability of quiescent embryos over time

PGYP1 and PGYP1.tet females were blood-fed on human blood, and 96 h post-blood meal isolated individually for oviposition in plastic Drosophila vials with wet filter paper funnels. After oviposition, egg papers were kept wet for 48 h, after which time they were removed from vials, wrapped individually in paper towel, and conditioned for a further 72 h at 25°C and 75–85% relative humidity. Egg batches were then moved to their respective storage temperature of 18°C, or 25°C in glass desiccator jars; maintained at a constant relative humidity of 85% with a saturated KCl solution [15]. For each temperature, 20 oviposition papers from each strain were hatched at seven time points at 7 day-intervals (5 to 47 days post-oviposition) by submersion in nutrient-infused deoxygenated water for 48 h. To hatch any remaining eggs, oviposition papers were dried briefly then submersed for a further 5 days and before the final number of hatched larvae was recorded. Multiple linear regression analysis was used to detect trends in the viability of eggs from each strain over time. MWU tests were used to compare viability of eggs between strains at the same storage age.

Results

Pre-imaginal development and adult size

No significant differences in development times for larval stages of wMelPop-CLA infected PGYP1 or tetracycline-cured PGYP1.tet males were found (MWU, P>0.05 for all comparisons) (Table 1). In contrast, the mean development time for male PGYP1 pupae (64.88±1.38 h) was significantly greater relative to PGYP1.tet (57.00±1.25 h) (MWU, U = 1892.00, P<0.001), resulting in a longer cumulative time to eclosion for this strain (MWU, U = 1484.50, P<0.001). For females, development times for immature stages were not significantly different between strains; except for third instar larvae where PGYP1 development times were increased by ∼5 h relative to PGYP1.tet (MWU, U = 1929.00, P = 0.013) (Table 1). Despite this delay, eclosion times for PGYP1 females were not significantly different from PGYP1.tet (MWU, U = 2185.50, P = 0.15). Overall, the survivorship of immature stages from both strains to adulthood was identical (96.15%).

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Table 1. Pre-imaginal development times of wMelPop-CLA infected PGYP1 and tetracycline-cured PGYP1.tet Ae. aegypti strains.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0000748.t001

A comparison of the wing lengths of newly emerged adults from both strains revealed a minor, yet statistically significant adult size cost to wMelPop-CLA infection for both sexes. Wing lengths of PGYP1 males (2.36±0.01 mm, n = 50) were significantly shorter than those of PGYP1.tet males (2.46±0.02 mm, n = 50) (MWU, U = 661.50, P<0.0001). A smaller size difference (MWU, U = 955.00, P = 0.04) was found between PGYP1 females (3.03±0.03 mm, n = 50) and PGYP1.tet females (3.09±0.03 mm, n = 50).

Reproductive output over lifespan

PGYP1 and PGYP1.tet females had similar reproductive outputs in terms of the number of eggs oviposited and the number of viable larvae hatched per female during their first gonotrophic cycle (Fig. 1A and B). However, during subsequent cycles both fecundity and fertility of PGYP1 females decreased at an accelerated rate (fecundity: R2 = 0.5068, F1,299 = 307.30, P<0.001; fertility: R2 = 0.3517, F1,299 = 162.20, P<0.001) relative to females from the PGYP1.tet strain (fecundity: R2 = 0.3167, F1,602 = 278.95, P<0.001; fertility: R2 = 0.1506, F1,602 = 106.76, P<0.001). For example, as PGYP1 females aged the average number of larvae produced per female decreased such that by the second cycle a 15% cost to reproductive output was observed relative to uninfected PGYP1.tet females, which progressively declined to a 40% cost by the fifth cycle (t-tests, P<0.05 for all comparisons). A large proportion of PGYP1 females that were randomly sampled for oviposition at the six and seventh gonotrophic cycles did not produce eggs (Fig. 1C), leading to a further decline in fecundity and fertility of this strain (Fig. 1A and B). This appeared to be due to defects in feeding behaviour, as many of these older PGYP1 females were observed to be unsuccessful in obtaining a blood meal (data not shown). Such a dramatic decrease in oviposition rates was not evident for PGYP1.tet females as they aged (Fig. 1C).

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Figure 1. Age-associated decline in fecundity of PGYP1 and PGYP1.tet strains.

(A) Average number of eggs oviposited per female ± SE. (B) Average number of larvae produced per female ± SE, and (C) Proportion of sampled females that did not oviposit. Females were assayed over successive gonotrophic cycles until death (n = 48 females per time-point). As death occurred over time, samples sizes decreased below 48 females in cycle 7 for PGYP1 females (n = 22), and in cycles 13–16 for PGYP1.tet females (n = 22, 12, 5, and 5 respectively).

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0000748.g001

Viability of quiescent embryos over time

The viability of quiescent embryos from the wMelPop-CLA infected PGYP1 strain decreased over time at 25°C and 18°C, whereas viability of embryos from the tetracycline-cured PGYP1.tet strain was relatively stable at both storage temperatures (Fig. 2). At 25°C (Fig. 2A), there was no significant difference in embryonic viability between PGYP1 (80.93±5.12%) and PGYP1.tet strains (74.96±4.37%) at 5 days post oviposition (MWU, U = 146.50, P = 0.1478). As quiescent embryos aged, however, PGYP1 embryonic viability decreased rapidly over time (R2 = 0.6539, F1,138 = 260.73, P<0.001), such that by 40 days post oviposition very few PGYP1 eggs hatched (0.44±0.24%). In contrast, PGYP1.tet embryonic viability remained relatively constant over time (R2 = 0.0005, F1,138 = 0.07, P = 0.7897) with ∼75% of quiescent eggs hatching at each time point. An analogous trend was observed at 18°C (Fig. 2B), where initially hatch rates were comparable between the two strains, but subsequently a greater loss in embryonic viability was observed for PGYP1 (R2 = 0.4035, F1,138 = 93.34, P<0.001) relative to PGYP1.tet (R2 = 0.0803, F1,138 = 12.05, P<0.001). This was particularly evident at 12 days post oviposition where embryonic viability declined more rapidly in PGYP1 (9.88±2.96%) compared to PGYP1.tet (68.06±4.12%) after being moved to a cooler storage temperature (MWU, U = 5.00, P<0.0001).

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Figure 2. Viability of quiescent embryos from PGYP1 and PGYP1.tet strains over time at different temperatures.

After embryonic maturation (120 h post oviposition), eggs were stored at either: (A) 25°C and (B) 18°C, with 85% relative humidity. Average proportion of eggs hatching (n = 20 oviposition papers per time point) and standard error bars are shown.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0000748.g002

Discussion

In its native D. melanogaster host, wMelPop induces minor phenotypic effects during pre-imaginal life-history stages [12], [16]. However, after adult emergence, somatic and nervous tissues of flies gradually become densely populated with Wolbachia leading to overt pathology and shortened life span [12]. Similarly, in this study we observed minor costs of wMelPop-CLA infection during Ae. aegypti pre-imaginal development, with the phenotypic effects of this virulent Wolbachia strain increasing as adult mosquitoes aged.

A small delay in the mean time to eclosion was observed for wMelPop-CLA infected Ae. aegypti males, but not females relative to their tetracycline-cured counterparts. Increased egg-to-adult development times have previously been characterized for certain D. melanogaster genotypes infected by wMelPop [16]. Differences in development time were also reflected by variations in adult body size, where size costs to wMelPop-CLA infection were more pronounced for infected males than infected females. Taken together, results from development time, immature survivorship and adult size assays suggest a minor physiological cost to wMelPop-CLA infection during Ae. aegypti pre-imaginal development. Additional studies that introduce larval competition [17], and which utilise a wide variety of potential nutrient sources likely to be encountered in field environments are required to fully evaluate the impact of wMelPop-CLA infection on this stage of Ae. aegypti life-history.

A common trait observed in many mosquito species, including Ae. aegypti, is a general decline in the numbers of eggs laid by females over successive gonotrophic cycles, which is thought to be caused by increasing ovarian follicle degeneration as mosquitoes age [18], [19]. Fecundity of both wMelPop-CLA infected and tetracycline-cured mosquito strains was initially comparable, consistent with previous assays using the PGYP1 Ae. aegypti strain [11]. Over subsequent gonotrophic cycles, however, fecundity declined at an accelerated rate in PGYP1 relative to the PGYP1.tet strain suggesting that wMelPop-CLA infection contributed to a reduction in reproductive fitness. This may be related to a progressive increase in pathology induced by this Wolbachia strain in reproductive tissue, as commonly observed in somatic and nervous tissue [12], as mosquitoes age. In Drosophila simulans, fecundity costs of wMelPop infection were initially high after transinfection of this strain from D. melanogaster, but attenuated over subsequent generations [20]. It remains possible that such costs to reproductive fitness will also diminish for PGYP1, as wMelPop-CLA and Ae. aegypti further adapt to each other.

Interestingly, as wMelPop-CLA infected females aged we observed a rapid decrease in the number of randomly sampled PGYP1 females that would oviposit in gonotrophic cycles 5 to 7. This time range correlates with the onset of wMelPop-CLA induced life-shortening in Ae. aegypti [11]. Such a decline in oviposition rate may be directly related to pathology induced in reproductive tissues, or most likely be due to unsuccessful blood feeding behaviour observed in wMelPop-CLA infected mosquitoes as they age [21]. Such an age-related decline in fecundity may limit or influence the rate at which the wMelPop-CLA infection to spreads through an Ae. aegypti population, and should therefore be considered in the development of models predicting invasion dynamics of this Wolbachia strain. A complete understanding of this magnitude of this effect will require further determination of the relative reproductive contribution of different age-classes of Wolbachia-infected and uninfected Ae. aegypti to mosquito population size in a more ecologically relevant field cage setting.

In addition to the previously characterized life-shortening [11] and viral interference phenotypes [13] of wMelPop-CLA infection in Ae. aegypti, a third major effect described in this study is the observation that this infection decreases the viability of quiescent embryos over time. The viability of eggs laid by tetracycline-cured Ae. aegypti remained high over the 1.5 month test period. In contrast, the viability of the wMelPop-CLA infected PGYP1 strain declined rapidly over time. This decrease in embryonic viability was particularly evident after PGYP1 eggs were moved to a cooler storage temperature, possibly reflecting decreased levels of cold tolerance in the presence of infection. Such decreases in embryonic viability are not observed in the closely related mosquito species Aedes albopictus, which is infected by two avirulent Wolbachia strains (wAlbA and wAlbB) [22]. Moreover, reductions in embryonic viability are also not seen in Ae. aegypti lines transinfected with wAlbB from Ae. albopictus [23].

The impact of wMelPop-CLA on survival of quiescent eggs may have important implications for the spread and maintenance of this infection in Ae. aegypti populations, as well as mosquito population dynamics. Larval habitats of container breeding mosquito species such as Ae. aegypti and other members of the subgenus Stegomyia, are often subject to high selection pressures due to drying during certain seasonal periods [24]. In this context, the effects of wMelPop-CLA on Ae. aegypti populations are likely to be highly dependent on geographical location where field releases occur.

In tropical regions, such as Thailand and Vietnam, where an abundance of both permanent and transient larval breeding sites exist and rainfall occurs on a regular basis or containers are maintained full of water by human intervention, it is likely that under certain release thresholds wMelPop-CLA will be able to spread and persist in local Ae. aegpyti populations. However, in regions with a pronounced dry season, such as northern Australia, where drying of eggs may occur, it would be expected that this effect would significantly reduce mosquito population size at the beginning of the following wet season due to wMelPop-CLA induced embryonic mortality. The magnitude of such an effect will be dependent on the ability of the wMelPop-CLA infection to invade an area under the action of CI before the onset of the dry season, as a concurrent decrease in Wolbachia prevalence in the mosquito population would also be expected if the infection had not spread to fixation prior to dry season onset.

From an applied perspective, we suggest that the ability of wMelPop-CLA to decrease mosquito viability during periods of embryonic quiescence may have potential utility in certain geographic locations as a tool to reduce mosquito population size at the beginning of each wet season. An analogous genetic strategy for population suppression has previously been proposed, involving the release of Ae. albopictus males adapted to tropical regions into temperate field populations of this mosquito species to reduce their over-wintering ability [25]. Given the importance of seasonal fluctuations in mosquito population density in influencing dengue epidemics [26], this phenotype may act synergistically with described effects of this infection on mosquito lifespan [11] and vector competence [13] to further reduce the probability of virus transmission in several disease-endemic countries worldwide. However, the observation that wMelPop-CLA influences fitness of both embryonic and adult life-history stages, also suggests that the invasion dynamics of this virulent Wolbachia strain are likely to be complex and highly sensitive to the ecological setting where field releases occur.

Acknowledgments

We thank Hilary Martin for technical assistance, and Elizabeth McGraw, Thomas Walker and members of the O'Neill lab for helpful comments.

Author Contributions

Conceived and designed the experiments: CJM SLO. Performed the experiments: CJM. Analyzed the data: CJM. Wrote the paper: CJM SLO.

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