Type:
Whole Allergen
Whole Allergen
Whole Allergen
Mosquito
i71
Culicidae
Aedes aegypti
Injection
Aedes communis
Yellow fever mosquito
XM95T4
(ICD-11 is currently under implementation by WHO and the ICD-11 codes displayed in the encyclopedia may not yet be available in all countries)
Aedes aegypti is one of over 3000 species of mosquito, belonging to the Culicidae family. Females feed primarily on mammals by biting the skin, injecting saliva, and extracting blood. The saliva that is inoculated into the body induces cutaneous, and occasionally systemic, reactions.
Ae. aegypti is a mosquito that requires warm and humid conditions for reproduction (1) and, thus, thrives in tropical and subtropical climates (2).
Global abundance of Ae. aegypti has increased an estimated 9.5% with a further increase of 20–30% anticipated by the end of this century (1). Because Ae. aegypti lays its eggs in water, humans add to larval sites through agriculture, polyculture and urbanization. Ae. aegypti abundance has increased in densely populated urban areas in part because of the availability of potential food (blood meals) and of human-created larval sites.
In addition to being the primary vector of important arboviruses (1), Ae. aegypti induces allergic reactions in sensitized individuals (3). People in tropical and subtropical regions are at higher risk of developing allergic sensitization because of mosquito exposure (4).
Taxonomic tree of Aedes aegypti (2) |
|
Domain |
Eukaryota |
Kingdom |
Metazoa |
Phylum |
Arthropoda |
Subphylum |
Uniramia |
Class |
Insecta |
Order |
Diptera |
Family |
Culicidae |
Genus |
Aedes. |
Saliva of the mosquito (3)
Mosquito allergy occurs worldwide, anywhere where mosquitoes and humans interact, and is common in climates that favor the mosquito life cycle, such as tropical and subtropical regions (4).
Injection of mosquito saliva (3).
Ae. aegypti saliva contains more than a hundred proteins, some of which induce cutaneous, and occasionally systemic, reactions in sensitized individuals (3).
Allergens in mosquito saliva can induce both immediate type I hypersensitivity reactions and delayed type 4 hypersensitivity reactions (3). Type I hypersensitivity reactions involve IgE-mediated mast cell degranulation that leads to vasodilation and pruritus within a few minutes of being bitten (3, 5). Wheals and erythema rapidly develop at the site of the bite (5). Delayed type 4 hypersensitivity reactions consist of non-specific infiltrates with macrophages, neutrophils, eosinophils and CD4+/CD8+ T lymphocytes. Delayed reactions are characterized by the appearance of an indurated papule 12–24 hours following the bite, and persisting for several days (5). In rare instances, systemic reactions occur, involving by generalized urticaria, angioedema, wheezing, and anaphylaxis (6).
The three major saliva allergens of Ae. aegypti are Aed a 1–3 (3). Table adapted from Allergome.org (7).
Allergen |
Type |
Mass (kDa) |
Aed a 1 |
Apyrase |
63 |
Aed a 2 |
Unknown salivary gland allergen |
37 |
Aed a 3 |
Unknown salivary gland allergen |
29 |
Aed a 4 |
Glycosyl hydrolase |
66 |
Aed a 5 |
Calcium-binding protein |
22 |
Aed a 6 |
Porin; anion channel protein |
30.5 |
Aed a 7 |
Unknown |
23.5 |
Aed a 8 |
Heat Shock protein |
72 |
Aed a 11 |
Aspartic protease |
42 |
Saliva-derived allergens from mosquitoes can also cross-react with proteins from bees (8).
In a study of individuals with asthma and/or allergic rhinitis in Martinique, cross-reactivity was seen between A. aegypti and mite species; A. aegypti cross reacted with Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus (96.6%), Litopenaeus vannamei (95.4%), Blomia tropicalis (84.4%), and Periplaneta americana (75.4%) (6).
Author: RubyDuke Communications
Reviewer: Dr. Christian Fischer
Last reviewed:April 2022