Conservation of and temperature-sensitive lethal mutations between and .

Front Insect Sci

School of BioSciences, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.

Published: March 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The sterile insect technique is a method used to reduce the Queensland fruit fly population by releasing sterile males that breed with wild females, resulting in non-viable offspring.
  • The research focuses on assessing temperature-sensitive genetic alleles for the creation of genetic sexing strains that can eliminate female flies from mass rearing, as current methods cannot efficiently remove female insects.
  • The findings show that some genetic modifications can improve larval survival and that specific alleles may allow for the selective killing of female flies at higher temperatures, although milder alternative alleles may be necessary for better efficacy.

Article Abstract

The sterile insect technique can suppress and eliminate population outbreaks of the Australian horticultural pest, , the Queensland fruit fly. Sterile males mate with wild females that produce inviable embryos, causing population suppression or elimination. Current sterile insect releases are mixed sex, as the efficient removal of unrequired factory-reared females is not yet possible. In this paper, we assessed the known temperature-sensitive embryonic lethal alleles (G268D, ) and (R977C, ) for potential use in developing genetic sexing strains (GSS) for the conditional removal of females. Complementation tests in wild-type or temperature-sensitive genetic backgrounds were performed using the GAL4-UAS transgene expression system. A wild-type isoform partially rescued temperature lethality at 29°C by improving survivorship to pupation, while expressing failed to rescue the lethality, supporting a temperature-sensitive phenotype. Expression of the wild-type protein rescued the lethality of flies at 29°C. Overexpressing the allele in the wild-type background unexpectedly produced a dominant lethal phenotype at 29°C. The and wild-type alleles were able to compensate, to varying degrees, for the function of the temperature-sensitive proteins, supporting functional conservation across species. and hold potential for developing insect strains that can selectively kill using elevated temperatures; however, alleles with milder effects than will need to be considered.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10926519PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/finsc.2024.1249103DOI Listing

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