Modeling the transmission of Wolbachia in mosquitoes for controlling mosquito-borne diseases
Zhuolin Qu, Ling Xue, and James M. Hyman

TL;DR
This study develops a detailed mathematical model to understand how Wolbachia bacteria can be sustained in mosquito populations to control diseases like dengue, revealing critical thresholds and effective strategies for infection establishment.
Contribution
The paper introduces a comprehensive two-sex mosquito model incorporating complex transmission dynamics and identifies key threshold conditions for Wolbachia persistence.
Findings
Wolbachia persistence depends on surpassing a critical infection threshold.
A backward bifurcation indicates multiple stable states in infection dynamics.
Reducing natural mosquito populations before releasing infected mosquitoes enhances success.
Abstract
We develop and analyze an ordinary differential equation model to assess the potential effectiveness of infecting mosquitoes with the Wolbachia bacteria to control the ongoing mosquito-borne epidemics, such as dengue fever, chikungunya, and Zika. Wolbachia is a natural parasitic microbe that stops the proliferation of the harmful viruses inside the mosquito and reduces disease transmission. It is difficult to sustain an infection of the maternal transmitted Wolbachia in a wild mosquito population because of the reduced fitness of the Wolbachia-infected mosquitoes and cytoplasmic incompatibility limiting maternal transmission. The infection will only persist if the fraction of the infected mosquitoes exceeds a minimum threshold. Our two-sex mosquito model captures the complex transmission-cycle by accounting for heterosexual transmission, multiple pregnant states for female mosquitoes,…
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