(Press-News.org) It’s bound to happen at a summer picnic, a peaceful walk in the woods or simply sitting in your backyard… a mosquito targets your blood for its next meal. You’ve been bitten.
But how do mosquitoes find you?
Among several methods used to locate new hosts for blood sucking, mosquitoes feature a keen ability to detect carbon dioxide. As we breathe out, we emit CO2 into the air around us, which mosquitoes can sense. But how?
Scientists have been aware of the mosquito’s ability to detect our carbon dioxide expirations but the intricate underlying physiological structures enabling these capabilities largely have remained unclear.
University of California San Diego researchers in the School of Biological Sciences and School of Medicine have now uncovered the first elaborately detailed visualizations of these mechanisms. At UC San Diego’s National Center for Microscopy and Imaging Research, the researchers used serial block-face electron microscopy, a technique that repeatedly slices tissue and images with an electron beam to generate detailed serial pictures, to construct 3D nanoscale models of the mosquito’s carbon dioxide-detecting neurons.
The research, which was led by UC San Diego undergraduate student researchers Shadi Charara and Jonathan Choy in Neurobiology Department Professor Chih-Ying Su’s lab, is published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
“In the past people have speculated about these mosquito mechanisms but they were hard to appreciate,” said Su. “Now we have a realistic 3D morphological model that provides quantitative measurements of the sensory surface area. This is the first time we’re seeing this level of detail.”
Mosquitoes detect carbon dioxide through sensory hairs known as sensilla. These hairs contain olfactory receptor neurons, or ORNs, including neurons specialized for CO2 sensing. The researchers focused on these features in Aedes aegypti mosquitoes, which are known to spread yellow fever, dengue, chikungunya and Zika viruses. The new results provide key insights into the mosquito’s sensing mechanisms that have been evolutionarily adapted to seek blood sources, a feature that contributes to their status as the world’s deadliest animal.
The new 3D visualizations reveal several remarkable specialized structures. Within the hairs, the new images revealed anatomical adaptations along sensory dendrites, branches that project out of neurons. Within capitate peg or “cpA” neurons, the researchers found enlarged CO2-sensing surface areas and a unique axonal architecture enriched with mitochondria — the energy components within cells — suggesting a high-energy-demand area. Such features likely allow heightened sensitivity to carbon dioxide.
“These characteristics suggest that ORNs have evolved specific metabolic and structural adaptations to support their essential role in host-seeking,” the researchers write in their paper.
The researchers also compared their new visualizations with similar structures found in fruit flies. They found that the analogous area in fruit flies is much less prominent, highlighting key differences between the insects.
“Fruit flies also have a sensing area for carbon dioxide but it’s much smaller,” said Su. “Sensing chemical cues is important for all animals but in fruit flies it serves as an alarm signal — they avoid carbon dioxide. For mosquitoes, carbon dioxide is an arousal cue that helps them find us. It’s a trigger for their whole host-seeking behavior.”
The researchers hope the new findings will provide valuable new information to further science’s understanding of the mosquito’s unique anatomical structures and their functions in seeking new blood hosts.
END
Researchers uncover previously unexplored details of mosquito’s specialized detection mechanisms
Biologists use cutting-edge imaging technology to probe anatomical adaptations designed to target carbon dioxide emitted by humans
2025-10-30
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[Press-News.org] Researchers uncover previously unexplored details of mosquito’s specialized detection mechanismsBiologists use cutting-edge imaging technology to probe anatomical adaptations designed to target carbon dioxide emitted by humans