Plasmodium-associated changes in human odor attract mosquitoes
Malaria parasites (Plasmodium) can change the attractiveness of their vertebrate hosts to Anopheles vectors, leading to a greater number of vector–host contacts and increased transmission. Indeed, naturally Plasmodium-infected children have been shown to attract more mosquitoes than parasite-free children. Here, we demonstrate Plasmodium-induced increases in the attractiveness of skin odor in Kenyan children and reveal quantitative differences in the production of specific odor components in infected vs. parasite-free individuals. We found the aldehydes heptanal, octanal, and nonanal to be produced in greater amounts by infected individuals and detected by mosquito antennae. In behavioral experiments, we demonstrated that these, and other, Plasmodium-induced aldehydes enhanced the attractiveness of a synthetic odor blend mimicking “healthy” human odor. Heptanal alone increased the attractiveness of “parasite-free” natural human odor. Should the increased production of these aldehydes by Plasmodium-infected humans lead to increased mosquito biting in a natural setting, this would likely affect the transmission of malaria.
| Item Type | Article |
|---|---|
| Open Access | Green |
| Additional information | Grant support from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. This work was supported by the Netherlands Organization for Health Research and Development(ZonMWTOP Grant 91211038, toW.T and R.W.S.). T.B. is further supported by a grant from The Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (Vidi fellowship; NWO Project 016.158.306). Rothamsted Research receives grant-aided support from the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research |
| Keywords | Malaria transmission, Host attractiveness, Parasite–vector–host interactions, Aldehydes, Disease biomarkers |
| Project | NWO Project 016.158.306, ZonMWTOP Grant 91211038 |
| Date Deposited | 05 Dec 2025 09:10 |
| Last Modified | 21 Jan 2026 17:14 |
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description - Rothamsted Research Press Release Monday 16 April 2018 Mosquitos reveal fata attraction.docx
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subject - Supplemental Material
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