Hillyer Lab News
Hillyer Lab News
NSF grant awarded to the Hillyer Lab to study hemolymph circulation in mosquitoes
Friday, March 1, 2013
A three year award has been made by the National Science Foundation to principal investigator Julián Hillyer to fund the lab’s investigations into hemolymph circulation in insects. In addition to funding exciting research, this award will support the training of graduate, undergraduate and high school students in biological research.
Award details:
•Title: Hemolymph circulation in mosquitoes.
•Funding Organization: NSF: BIO: Integrative organismal systems (IOS): Physiological and structural systems (PSS): Processes, Structures and Integrity (PSI).
•Award Number: IOS-1257936.
•Start Date: March 1, 2013
•Principal Investigator: Julián F. Hillyer
• Proposal Abstract:
Insects employ an open circulatory system for the transport of nutrients, wastes, and signaling molecules throughout the body. The insect circulatory system also functions in thermoregulation, promoting respiration, and the circulation of immune factors that survey tissues for foreign invaders. The insect circulatory system consists of hemolymph (blood), an open body cavity called the hemocoel, and a series of pumps, with the primary pump being a muscular dorsal vessel that is divided into a thoracic aorta and an abdominal heart. While some recent work has focused on the physiology of the insect heart, little is known about hemolymph flow. Thus, the goal of this research is to characterize the mechanics of hemolymph circulation throughout the mosquito hemocoel. Objective 1 will employ novel fluorescence-based intravital imaging methods to qualitatively and quantitatively map hemolymph circulation in all regions of this insect. Objective 2 will assess the role accessory pulsatile organs play in hemolymph propulsion. Objective 3 will determine how heart rhythms and hemolymph currents change under various physiological conditions. Finally, objective 4 will test how mosquito infection affects circulatory physiology. The research will make critical contributions to the field of insect circulatory physiology and will create the first quantitative map of hemolymph circulation in any insect. Furthermore, this research will be carried out in mosquitoes, a socially and ecologically important insect group because of their role as pests and pathogen transmitters. Because hemolymph circulation affects the dissemination of insecticides throughout the mosquito body, as well as the obligate migration of pathogens prior to their transmission, a better understanding of hemolymph circulation could contribute to the development of novel pest and disease control strategies. In addition to its scientific merit, this project will result in the training of graduate and undergraduate students in biological research.
The National Science Foundation (NSF) is an independent federal agency created by Congress in 1950 "to promote the progress of science; to advance the national health, prosperity, and welfare; to secure the national defense…"
The Division of Integrative Organismal Systems (IOS) supports research aimed at an integrative understanding of organisms. The goal is to predict why organisms are structured the way they are, and function as they do.