Dose-Response Assay for Synthetic Mosquito (Diptera: Culicidae) Attractant Using a High-Throughput Screening System

Natural volatile host cues play a critical role for mosquito orientation and locating a blood source for egg production. Similar olfactory activation responses have allowed the use and development of artificial chemical attractants to lure mosquitoes to trapping devices. Using a pre-formulated comme...

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Published inInsects (Basel, Switzerland) Vol. 12; no. 4; p. 355
Main Authors Kim, Dae-Yun, Leepasert, Theerachart, Bangs, Michael J, Chareonviriyaphap, Theeraphap
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland MDPI AG 16.04.2021
MDPI
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Summary:Natural volatile host cues play a critical role for mosquito orientation and locating a blood source for egg production. Similar olfactory activation responses have allowed the use and development of artificial chemical attractants to lure mosquitoes to trapping devices. Using a pre-formulated commercial product mixture of different attractant chemicals, a high-throughput screening system (HITSS) is used to screen varying doses of chemical required to activate behavioral responses. Two strains of (L.): permethrin-susceptible (USDA) and -resistant (Pu Teuy) phenotypes and one Say. (NIH) laboratory strain were tested. Overall, mosquitoes showed repellency between 1.0 g and to 10.0 g dose of each compound. However, by progressively reducing the dose, showed a greater positive percent attraction (88.9%) at 0.025 g, whereas the USDA and Pu Teuy produced optimum attractant activation at 0.005 g (72.6% and 58.9%, respectively) without significant difference within species ( > 0.05). In parallel control assays, was significantly attracted to 1 g of dry ice (carbon dioxide) (76%) more than (USDA) (12.2%). The HITSS was originally designed to measure three chemical actions to sublethal concentrations of chemicals by mosquitoes: toxicity and the two primary behavior avoidance responses (contact excitation and spatial repellency). These findings demonstrate that the HITSS assay, with only minor modifications, allows comparison screening of candidate compounds as potential attractants for anemotactic responses under laboratory-controlled conditions. Further investigations will be required to equate measurements obtained from controlled laboratory assays to more varied field conditions for attracting natural mosquito populations.
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ISSN:2075-4450
2075-4450
DOI:10.3390/insects12040355