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Competition matters: using in vitro community models to study the impact of human skin bacteria on mosquito attraction

Lucas-Barbosa, Dani; Balvers, Carlijn; Bellantuono, Anthony J.; Castillo, John S.; Costa-da-Silva, André L.; De Moraes, Consuelo M.; DeGennaro, Matthew and Verhulst, Niels O. (2023) Competition matters: using in vitro community models to study the impact of human skin bacteria on mosquito attraction. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, 11, pp. 1-10.

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Document available online at: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fevo.2023.1156311/full


Summary in the original language of the document

The human skin bacteria play an important role in the production of volatiles that attract mosquitoes. Using some of the most abundant human skin bacterial species, we created in vitro community models to assess whether increased microbial biodiversity could reduce human attractiveness to females of the dengue fever mosquito Aedes aegypti and whether co-culturing bacterial commensals affects overall attraction. More complex bacterial models were less attractive to female mosquitoes than the simplest models. For instance, the triple bacterial community model was approximately three times less attractive
than Staphylococcus epidermidis alone. Our data show, for instance, that an in vitro community model mimicking the skin composition of a highly attractive individual to the anthropophilic Anopheles gambiae was also more attractive
to anthropophilic Ae. aegypti than a community model mimicking the skin composition of a poorly attractive individual to An. gambiae. In line with these
results, volatile analyses of the blends emitted by the different in vitro community models showed that the more complex models had lower emission overall.
Effects on mosquito responses differed sharply when the different bacteria species were sharing the same resources used for growth, showing that either competition or commensalism may influence their relative growth, and that this consequently can influence mosquito responses. We conclude that studies on mosquito responses to skin volatiles need to take the microbial community into
account.


EPrint Type:Journal paper
Keywords:human skin bacteria, Aedes (Ae.) aegypti, in vitro communities, volatiles, mosquito
Agrovoc keywords:
Language
Value
URI
English
in vitro
http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_37563
English
mosquitoes -> Culicidae
http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_2016
Subjects: Knowledge management > Education, extension and communication > Technology transfer
Knowledge management > Education, extension and communication
Research affiliation: Switzerland > ETHZ - Agrarwissenschaften
Switzerland > FiBL - Research Institute of Organic Agriculture Switzerland > Crops > Crop protection
Switzerland > Zürich University
USA
ISSN:2296-701X
DOI:10.3389/fevo.2023.1156311
Deposited By: Lucas-Barbosa, dr Dani
ID Code:46144
Deposited On:13 Jul 2023 08:23
Last Modified:13 Jul 2023 08:23
Document Language:English
Status:Published
Refereed:Peer-reviewed and accepted

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