AbstractAedes aegypti mosquitoes obtain from vertebrate blood nutrients that are essential to oogenesis, such as proteins and lipids. As with all insects, mosquitoes do not synthesize cholesterol but take it from the diet. Here, we used a chemically defined artificial diet, hereafter referred to as Substitute Blood Meal (SBM), that was supplemented with cholesterol to test the nutritional role of cholesterol. SBM-fed and blood-fed mosquitoes were compared regarding several aspects of the insect physiology that are influenced by a blood meal, including egg laying, peritrophic matrix formation, gut microbiota proliferation, generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and expression of antioxidant genes, such as catalase and ferritin. Our resu...
Fresh blood meals were categorized as BF1, and were characterized by a large size, bright red color,...
Background: Hematophagy poses a challenge to blood-feeding organisms since products of blood digesti...
Author Institution: Department of Zoology and Entomology, The Ohio State University, Columbus 1
AbstractAedes aegypti mosquitoes obtain from vertebrate blood nutrients that are essential to oogene...
Mosquito-borne diseases are responsible for more than a million human deaths every year. Modern mosq...
The intake of a Plasmodium-infected blood meal may affect mosquito physiology and a series of trade-...
Malaria research requires large-scale breeding and production conditions for mosquitoes (Anopheles s...
the mosquito Aedes aegypti (Ae. aegypti) is an important vector of arboviruses, including Zika, Deng...
Mosquito breeding depends on the supply of fresh vertebrate blood, a major bottleneck for large-scal...
Aedes aegypti females ingest sugar or blood to obtain the nutrients needed to maintain cellular hom...
Micronutrients or non-energetic nutrients (NEN) are needed in reduced amounts, but are essential for...
The fat body is considered the insect analog of vertebrate liver and fat tissue. In mosquitoes, a bl...
International audienceMosquito-transmitted pathogens pass through the insect's midgut (MG) and saliv...
A vertebrate bloodmeal is required by female mosquitoes of most species to obtain nutrients for egg ...
Mosquito-transmitted diseases have led to a vast increase in attempts to find a sustainable method t...
Fresh blood meals were categorized as BF1, and were characterized by a large size, bright red color,...
Background: Hematophagy poses a challenge to blood-feeding organisms since products of blood digesti...
Author Institution: Department of Zoology and Entomology, The Ohio State University, Columbus 1
AbstractAedes aegypti mosquitoes obtain from vertebrate blood nutrients that are essential to oogene...
Mosquito-borne diseases are responsible for more than a million human deaths every year. Modern mosq...
The intake of a Plasmodium-infected blood meal may affect mosquito physiology and a series of trade-...
Malaria research requires large-scale breeding and production conditions for mosquitoes (Anopheles s...
the mosquito Aedes aegypti (Ae. aegypti) is an important vector of arboviruses, including Zika, Deng...
Mosquito breeding depends on the supply of fresh vertebrate blood, a major bottleneck for large-scal...
Aedes aegypti females ingest sugar or blood to obtain the nutrients needed to maintain cellular hom...
Micronutrients or non-energetic nutrients (NEN) are needed in reduced amounts, but are essential for...
The fat body is considered the insect analog of vertebrate liver and fat tissue. In mosquitoes, a bl...
International audienceMosquito-transmitted pathogens pass through the insect's midgut (MG) and saliv...
A vertebrate bloodmeal is required by female mosquitoes of most species to obtain nutrients for egg ...
Mosquito-transmitted diseases have led to a vast increase in attempts to find a sustainable method t...
Fresh blood meals were categorized as BF1, and were characterized by a large size, bright red color,...
Background: Hematophagy poses a challenge to blood-feeding organisms since products of blood digesti...
Author Institution: Department of Zoology and Entomology, The Ohio State University, Columbus 1