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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://repositorio.insp.mx:8080/jspui/handle/20.500.12096/8382
Title: Development of the indirect flight muscles of Aedes aegypti, a main arbovirus vector
Keywords: Aedes* Animals Arboviruses* Drosophila melanogaster Mosquito Vectors Sarcomeres nan
Issue Date: 2021
Publisher: BioMed Central
Abstract: Abstract Background: Flying is an essential function for mosquitoes, required for mating and, in the case of females, to get a blood meal and consequently function as a vector. Flight depends on the action of the indirect fight muscles (IFMs), which power the wings beat. No description of the development of IFMs in mosquitoes, including Aedes aegypti, is available. Methods: A. aegypti thoraces of larvae 3 and larvae 4 (L3 and L4) instars were analyzed using histochemistry and bright feld microscopy. IFM primordia from L3 and L4 and IFMs from pupal and adult stages were dissected and pro cessed to detect F-actin labelling with phalloidin-rhodamine or TRITC, or to immunodetection of myosin and tubulin using specifc antibodies, these samples were analyzed by confocal microscopy. Other samples were studied using transmission electron microscopy. Results: At L3L4, IFM primordia for dorsal-longitudinal muscles (DLM) and dorsalventral muscles (DVM) were iden tifed in the expected locations in the thoracic region: three primordia per hemithorax corresponding to DLM with anterior to posterior orientation were present. Other three primordia per hemithorax, corresponding to DVM, had lateral position and dorsal to ventral orientation. During L3 to L4 myoblast fusion led to syncytial myotubes formation, followed by myotendon junctions (MTJ) creation, myofbrils assembly and sarcomere maturation. The formation of Z-discs and M-line during sarcomere maturation was observed in pupal stage and, the structure reached in teneral insects a classical myosin thick, and actin thin flaments arranged in a hexagonal lattice structure. Conclusions: A general description of A. aegypti IFM development is presented, from the myoblast fusion at L3 to form myotubes, to sarcomere maturation at adult stage. Several diferences during IFM development were observed between A. aegypti (Nematoceran) and Drosophila melanogaster (Brachyceran) and, similitudes with Chironomus sp. were observed as this insect is a Nematoceran, which is taxonomically closer to A. aegypti and share the same number of larval stages.
URI: file:///C:/Users/atalani.REDINSP/Downloads/s12861-021-00242-8.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12861-021-00242-8.
http://repositorio.insp.mx:8080/jspui/handle/20.500.12096/8382
ISSN: 1471-213X
Appears in Collections:Artículos

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