Baeshen Rowida, Ekechukwu Nkiru E, Toure Mahamoudou, Paton Doug, Coulibaly Mamadou, Traoré Sékou F, Tripet Frédéric
Centre for Applied Entomology and Parasitology, School of Life Sciences, Keele University, Keele, Staffordshire ST5 5BG, UK.
Malar J. 2014 Jan 13;13:19. doi: 10.1186/1475-2875-13-19.
Effective mating between laboratory-reared males and wild females is paramount to the success of vector control strategies aiming to decrease disease transmission via the release of sterile or genetically modified male mosquitoes. However mosquito colonization and laboratory maintenance have the potential to negatively affect male genotypic and phenotypic quality through inbreeding and selection, which in turn can decrease male mating competitiveness in the field. To date, very little is known about the impact of those evolutionary forces on the reproductive biology of mosquito colonies and how they ultimately affect male reproductive fitness.
Here several male reproductive physiological traits likely to be affected by inbreeding and selection following colonization and laboratory rearing were examined. Sperm length, and accessory gland and testes size were compared in male progeny from field-collected females and laboratory strains of Anopheles gambiae sensu stricto colonized from one to over 25 years ago. These traits were also compared in the parental and sequentially derived, genetically modified strains produced using a two-phase genetic transformation system. Finally, genetic crosses were performed between strains in order to distinguish the effects of inbreeding and selection on reproductive traits.
Sperm length was found to steadily decrease with the age of mosquito colonies but was recovered in refreshed strains and crosses between inbred strains therefore incriminating inbreeding costs. In contrast, testes size progressively increased with colony age, whilst accessory gland size quickly decreased in males from colonies of all ages. The lack of heterosis in response to crossing and strain refreshing in the latter two reproductive traits suggests selection for insectary conditions.
These results show that inbreeding and selection differentially affect reproductive traits in laboratory strains overtime and that heterotic 'supermales' could be used to rescue some male reproductive characteristics. Further experiments are needed to establish the exact relationship between sperm length, accessory gland and testes size, and male reproductive success in the laboratory and field settings.
对于旨在通过释放不育或转基因雄蚊来减少疾病传播的病媒控制策略而言,实验室饲养的雄蚊与野生雌蚊之间的有效交配至关重要。然而,蚊子的定殖和实验室饲养有可能通过近亲繁殖和选择对雄蚊的基因型和表型质量产生负面影响,进而降低雄蚊在野外的交配竞争力。迄今为止,对于这些进化力量对蚊群生殖生物学的影响以及它们最终如何影响雄蚊生殖适应性,人们知之甚少。
在此,研究了几种可能受定殖和实验室饲养后的近亲繁殖和选择影响的雄蚊生殖生理特征。比较了冈比亚按蚊狭义亚种从野外采集的雌蚊所产后代雄蚊以及定殖1至25年以上的实验室品系雄蚊的精子长度、附腺和睾丸大小。还比较了使用两阶段遗传转化系统产生的亲本及后续衍生的转基因品系中的这些特征。最后,在品系之间进行遗传杂交,以区分近亲繁殖和选择对生殖性状的影响。
发现精子长度随蚊群年龄的增长而稳步下降,但在更新的品系中得以恢复,并且近交系之间的杂交也出现这种情况,因此表明存在近亲繁殖代价。相比之下,睾丸大小随蚊群年龄逐渐增加,而各年龄段蚊群的雄蚊附腺大小迅速减小。后两个生殖性状在杂交和品系更新时缺乏杂种优势,这表明是对昆虫饲养条件进行了选择。
这些结果表明,随着时间的推移,近亲繁殖和选择对实验室品系的生殖性状有不同影响,并且杂种优势“超级雄蚊”可用于挽救一些雄蚊的生殖特征。需要进一步的实验来确定精子长度、附腺和睾丸大小与实验室及野外环境中雄蚊生殖成功之间的确切关系。