Age-structured vectorial capacity reveals timing, not magnitude of within-mosquito dynamics is critical for arbovirus fitness assessment

Abstract Background Transmission dynamics of arboviruses like Zika virus are often evaluated by vector competence (the proportion of infectious vectors given exposure) and the extrinsic incubation period (EIP, the time it takes for a vector to become infectious), but vector age is another critical d...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: E. Handly Mayton, A. Ryan Tramonte, Helen J. Wearing, Rebecca C. Christofferson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-06-01
Series:Parasites & Vectors
Subjects:
EIP
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13071-020-04181-4
id doaj-90544a50808a4c2ebe9718dc9ce4d8bb
record_format Article
spelling doaj-90544a50808a4c2ebe9718dc9ce4d8bb2020-11-25T03:49:32ZengBMCParasites & Vectors1756-33052020-06-0113111310.1186/s13071-020-04181-4Age-structured vectorial capacity reveals timing, not magnitude of within-mosquito dynamics is critical for arbovirus fitness assessmentE. Handly Mayton0A. Ryan Tramonte1Helen J. Wearing2Rebecca C. Christofferson3Department of Pathobiological Sciences, School of Veterinary Medicine, Louisiana State UniversityDepartment of Pathobiological Sciences, School of Veterinary Medicine, Louisiana State UniversityDepartments of Biology and Mathematics & Statistics, University of New MexicoDepartment of Pathobiological Sciences, School of Veterinary Medicine, Louisiana State UniversityAbstract Background Transmission dynamics of arboviruses like Zika virus are often evaluated by vector competence (the proportion of infectious vectors given exposure) and the extrinsic incubation period (EIP, the time it takes for a vector to become infectious), but vector age is another critical driver of transmission dynamics. Vectorial capacity (VC) is a measure of transmission potential of a vector-pathogen system, but how these three components, EIP, vector competence and vector age, affect VC in concert still needs study. Methods The interaction of vector competence, EIP, and mosquito age at the time of infection acquisition (Ageacquisition) was experimentally measured in an Aedes aegypti-ZIKV model system, as well as the age-dependence of probability of survival and the willingness to bite. An age-structured vectorial capacity framework (VCage) was then developed using both EIPMin and EIPMax, defined as the time to first observed minimum proportion of transmitting mosquitoes and the time to observed maximum proportion of transmitting mosquitoes. Results The within-mosquito dynamics of vector competence/EIP were not significant among treatments where mosquitoes were exposed at different ages. However, VCage revealed: (i) age-dependence in vector-virus interactions is important for transmission success; (ii) lower vector competence but at shorter EIPs was sufficient for transmission perpetuation; and (iii) R0 may be overestimated by using non-age-structured VC. Conclusions The results indicate that ultimately the temporal component of the virus-vector dynamics is most critical, especially when exposure occurred at advanced mosquito age. While our study is limited to a single virus-vector system, and a multitude of other factors affect both vector competence and mosquito mortality, our methods can be extrapolated to these other scenarios. Results indicate that how ‘highly’ or ‘negligibly’ competent vectors are categorized may need adjustment.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13071-020-04181-4Extrinsic incubation periodEIPVector competenceAedes aegyptiVectorial capacityZika
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author E. Handly Mayton
A. Ryan Tramonte
Helen J. Wearing
Rebecca C. Christofferson
spellingShingle E. Handly Mayton
A. Ryan Tramonte
Helen J. Wearing
Rebecca C. Christofferson
Age-structured vectorial capacity reveals timing, not magnitude of within-mosquito dynamics is critical for arbovirus fitness assessment
Parasites & Vectors
Extrinsic incubation period
EIP
Vector competence
Aedes aegypti
Vectorial capacity
Zika
author_facet E. Handly Mayton
A. Ryan Tramonte
Helen J. Wearing
Rebecca C. Christofferson
author_sort E. Handly Mayton
title Age-structured vectorial capacity reveals timing, not magnitude of within-mosquito dynamics is critical for arbovirus fitness assessment
title_short Age-structured vectorial capacity reveals timing, not magnitude of within-mosquito dynamics is critical for arbovirus fitness assessment
title_full Age-structured vectorial capacity reveals timing, not magnitude of within-mosquito dynamics is critical for arbovirus fitness assessment
title_fullStr Age-structured vectorial capacity reveals timing, not magnitude of within-mosquito dynamics is critical for arbovirus fitness assessment
title_full_unstemmed Age-structured vectorial capacity reveals timing, not magnitude of within-mosquito dynamics is critical for arbovirus fitness assessment
title_sort age-structured vectorial capacity reveals timing, not magnitude of within-mosquito dynamics is critical for arbovirus fitness assessment
publisher BMC
series Parasites & Vectors
issn 1756-3305
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Abstract Background Transmission dynamics of arboviruses like Zika virus are often evaluated by vector competence (the proportion of infectious vectors given exposure) and the extrinsic incubation period (EIP, the time it takes for a vector to become infectious), but vector age is another critical driver of transmission dynamics. Vectorial capacity (VC) is a measure of transmission potential of a vector-pathogen system, but how these three components, EIP, vector competence and vector age, affect VC in concert still needs study. Methods The interaction of vector competence, EIP, and mosquito age at the time of infection acquisition (Ageacquisition) was experimentally measured in an Aedes aegypti-ZIKV model system, as well as the age-dependence of probability of survival and the willingness to bite. An age-structured vectorial capacity framework (VCage) was then developed using both EIPMin and EIPMax, defined as the time to first observed minimum proportion of transmitting mosquitoes and the time to observed maximum proportion of transmitting mosquitoes. Results The within-mosquito dynamics of vector competence/EIP were not significant among treatments where mosquitoes were exposed at different ages. However, VCage revealed: (i) age-dependence in vector-virus interactions is important for transmission success; (ii) lower vector competence but at shorter EIPs was sufficient for transmission perpetuation; and (iii) R0 may be overestimated by using non-age-structured VC. Conclusions The results indicate that ultimately the temporal component of the virus-vector dynamics is most critical, especially when exposure occurred at advanced mosquito age. While our study is limited to a single virus-vector system, and a multitude of other factors affect both vector competence and mosquito mortality, our methods can be extrapolated to these other scenarios. Results indicate that how ‘highly’ or ‘negligibly’ competent vectors are categorized may need adjustment.
topic Extrinsic incubation period
EIP
Vector competence
Aedes aegypti
Vectorial capacity
Zika
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13071-020-04181-4
work_keys_str_mv AT ehandlymayton agestructuredvectorialcapacityrevealstimingnotmagnitudeofwithinmosquitodynamicsiscriticalforarbovirusfitnessassessment
AT aryantramonte agestructuredvectorialcapacityrevealstimingnotmagnitudeofwithinmosquitodynamicsiscriticalforarbovirusfitnessassessment
AT helenjwearing agestructuredvectorialcapacityrevealstimingnotmagnitudeofwithinmosquitodynamicsiscriticalforarbovirusfitnessassessment
AT rebeccacchristofferson agestructuredvectorialcapacityrevealstimingnotmagnitudeofwithinmosquitodynamicsiscriticalforarbovirusfitnessassessment
_version_ 1724494966855565312