Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2428849 Developmental & Comparative Immunology 2016 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Blood meal-induced hemocyte activation in Anopheles gambiae is transient.•We do not find evidence of hemocyte differentiation upon blood meal.•Hemocyte activation is likely accompanied by degranulation of immune proteins.•The time course of transient hemocyte activation suggests hormonal control.

Hemocytes are crucial players of the mosquito immune system and critically affect transmission of pathogens including malaria parasites. We and others discovered previously that a blood meal is a major immune stimulus for mosquito hemocytes. To determine whether these blood meal-induced hemocyte changes in Anopheles gambiae constitute steps in cell differentiation or demonstrate transient cell activation, we analyzed the temporal pattern of these changes over the first three days post blood meal (dpbm). Flow cytometry and immunofluorescence analyses revealed a global shift of the entire hemocyte population, peaking at 1 dpbm. All hemocyte activation markers returned to pre-blood meal baseline levels within the following 24–48 h. Our observations are consistant with An. gambiae hemocytes undergoing transient activation rather than terminal differentiation upon blood feeding. Interestingly, the temporal pattern followed the gonotrophic cycle of the mosquito, strongly suggesting hormonal control of mosquito hemocyte activation and deactivation.

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