JNK signaling regulates reproductive trade-offs after Plasmodium infection in the malaria mosquito
The study investigates how environmental stress affects reproduction in the malaria mosquito Anopheles gambiae, focusing on c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) signaling and its regulation of ecdysteroid production needed for egg development. Using infection with Plasmodium berghei and other stressors such as heat stress or ectopic JNK activation, the authors show that parasite infection increases JNK signaling in the reproductive tract and causes a JNK-dependent reduction in egg development and mosquito survival. Mechanistically, JNK suppresses expression of the rate-limiting ecdysteroid-synthesis enzyme Cyp315a1 and reduces ecdysteroid production after an infected blood meal. The paper presents a mosquito model of stress-reproductive trade-offs and explicitly relates the findings to stressors more generally, but it does not address human reproductive diseases. The paper does not explicitly discuss endometriosis or adenomyosis; it was included in the corpus via a keyword match in the upstream search index.
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- last seen: 2026-05-20T01:45:00.602351+00:00