Volf P., Svobodová M. and
Dvořáková E. (2001) Bloodmeal digestion and Leishmania major infections in Phlebotomus
duboscqi: effect of carbohydrates inhibiting midgut lectin activity. Medical and
Veterinary. Entomology. 15 (3): 281-286
Keywords:
Leishmania major, Phlebotomus duboscqi, bloodmeal, carbohydrates, galactosamine,
heparin, lectin activity, midgut, proteases, sandfly, vector competence KeyWords
Plus:
D-GLUCOSAMINE, GLOSSINA-MORSITANS, PAPATASI, TRYPSIN, SANDFLIES, GALACTOSAMINE,
GUT
Abstract:
The carbohydrates galactosamine and heparin, previously shown to inhibit phlebotomine
lectin activity in vitro, were fed to the sandfly Phlebotomus duboscqi Neveu-Lemaire
(Diptera: Psychodidae) with blood, and the effects on mortality, fecundity, protease
activity and susceptibility to Leishmania major Yakimoff & Schokhor (Kinetoplastida:
Trypanosomatidae) were studied. Previous study revealed that galactosamine considerably
enhanced the establishment of L. major infection in P. duboscqi and significantly
increased parasite loads in late infections. This work demonstrates a similar
but less pronounced effect of heparin. Heparin increased infection rates and parasite
loads 3 and 9 days post-feeding but did not affect the location of Leishmania
promastigotes and their anterior migration. Galactosamine supplement caused pronounced
changes in bloodmeal digestion. It abolished the activity of alkaline proteases
and trypsin, caused premature defecation of bloodmeal, increased mortality of
female sandflies in days 1-4 post-feeding and decreased their fecundity. Heparin
had a less pronounced effect on sandfly physiology. It lowered trypsin activity
12 and 72 h post-bloodmeal but did not alter defecation, mortality and oviposition.
The data suggest that the enhancing effect of these carbohydrates on Leishmania
infections in sandfly midgut could be explained by their interference with midgut
proteases. The study supports the hypothesis that proteolytic activities of midgut
proteases strongly influence the vector competence of sandflies.
ISSN 0269-283x
IF 1,242
UK