Insecticide resistance status of indoor and outdoor resting malaria vectors in a highland and lowland site in Western Kenya
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PLOS ONE
Abstract
Long Lasting Insecticidal Nets (LLINs) and indoor residual spraying (IRS) represent powerful tools for controlling malaria vectors in sub-Saharan Africa. The success of these interventions relies on their capability to inhibit indoor feeding and resting of malaria mosquitoes.
This study sought to understand the interaction of insecticide resistance with indoor and outdoor resting behavioral responses of malaria vectors from Western Kenya.
The status of insecticide resistance among indoor and outdoor resting anopheline mosquitoes was compared in Anopheles mosquitoes collected from Kisumu and Bungoma counties in Western Kenya. The level and intensity of resistance were measured using WHO-tube and CDC-bottle bioassays, respectively. The synergist piperonyl butoxide (PBO) was
used to determine if metabolic activity (monooxygenase enzymes) explained the resistance
observed. The mutations at the voltage-gated sodium channel (Vgsc) gene and Ace 1 gene
were characterized using PCR methods. Microplate assays were used to measure levels of
detoxification enzymes if present.
A total of 1094 samples were discriminated within Anopheles gambiae s.l. and 289 within
An. funestus s.l. In Kisian (Kisumu county), the dominant species was Anopheles arabiensis
75.2% (391/520) while in Kimaeti (Bungoma county) collections the dominant sibling species was Anopheles gambiae s.s 96.5% (554/574). The An. funestus s.l samples analysed
were all An. funestus s.s from both sites. Pyrethroid resistance of An.gambiae s.l F1 progeny was observed in all sites. Lower mortality was observed against deltamethrin for the
progeny of indoor resting mosquitoes compared to outdoor resting mosquitoes (Mortality
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Research Article