Skip to main content
Dryad

Data from: Complex environmental drivers of immunity and resistance in malaria mosquitoes

Cite this dataset

Murdock, Courtney C.; Moller-Jacobs, Lillian L.; Thomas, Matthew B. (2013). Data from: Complex environmental drivers of immunity and resistance in malaria mosquitoes [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.c6s34

Abstract

Considerable research effort has been directed at understanding the genetic and molecular basis of mosquito innate immune mechanisms. Whether environmental factors interact with these mechanisms to shape overall resistance remains largely unexplored. Here we examine how changes in mean ambient temperature, diurnal temperature fluctuation, and time of day of infection affected the immunity and resistance of Anopheles stephensi to infection with Escherichia coli. We used quantitative PCR to estimate the gene expression of three immune genes in response to challenge with heat-killed Escherichia coli. We also infected mosquitoes with live E. coli and ran bacterial survival assays to quantify host resistance. Both mosquito immune parameters and resistance were directly affected by mean temperature, diurnal temperature fluctuation, and time of day of infection. Furthermore there was a suite of complex 2- and 3-way interactions yielding idiosyncratic phenotypic variation under different environmental conditions. The results demonstrate mosquito immunity and resistance to be strongly influenced by a complex interplay of environmental variables, challenging the interpretation of the very many mosquito immune studies conducted under standard laboratory conditions.

Usage notes