Department of Life Sciences, Imperial College London, Silwood Park, Ascot, UK.
Vector Biology and Control Section, Department of Entomology, Armed Forces Research Institute of Medical Sciences, Bangkok, Thailand.
Parasit Vectors. 2019 Jul 19;12(1):357. doi: 10.1186/s13071-019-3617-2.
Evaluating and improving mating success and competitive ability of laboratory-reared transgenic mosquito strains will enhance the effectiveness of proposed disease-control strategies that involve deployment of transgenic strains. Two components of the mosquito rearing process, larval diet quantity and aquatic environment - which are linked to physiological and behavioural differences in adults - are both relatively easy to manipulate. In mosquitoes, as for many other arthropod species, the quality of the juvenile habitat is strongly associated with adult fitness characteristics, such as longevity and fecundity. However, the influence of larval conditioning on mating performance is poorly understood. Here, we investigated the combined effects of larval diet amount and environmental water source on adult male mating success in a genetically modified strain of Aedes aegypti mosquitoes in competition with wild-type conspecifics. Importantly, this research was conducted in a field setting using low generation laboratory and wild-type lines.
By controlling larval diet (high and low) and rearing water source (field-collected and laboratory water), we generated four treatment lines of a genetically modified strain of Ae. aegypti tagged with fluorescent sperm. Laboratory reared mosquitoes were then competed against a low generation wild-type colony in a series of laboratory and semi-field mating experiments. While neither food quantity nor larval aquatic environment were found to affect male mating fitness, the transgenic lines consistently outperformed wild-types in laboratory competition assays, an advantage that was not conferred to semi-field tests.
Using a model transgenic system, our results indicate that differences in the experimental conditions of laboratory- and field-based measures of mating success can lead to variation in the perceived performance ability of modified strains if they are only tested in certain environments. While there are many potential sources of variation between laboratory and field lines, laboratory adaptation - which may occur over relatively few generations in this species - may directly impact mating ability depending on the context in which it is measured. We suggest that colony-hybridization with field material can potentially be used to mitigate these effects in a field setting. Release programs utilising mass-produced modified laboratory strains should incorporate comparative assessments of quality in candidate lines.
评估和提高实验室饲养的转基因蚊子品系的交配成功率和竞争能力,将增强涉及部署转基因品系的拟议疾病控制策略的有效性。蚊子饲养过程中的两个组成部分,幼虫饮食量和水生环境-这与成虫的生理和行为差异有关-都相对容易操作。在蚊子中,就像许多其他节肢动物物种一样,幼虫栖息地的质量与成虫的适应能力特征密切相关,例如寿命和繁殖力。然而,幼虫饲养对交配性能的影响知之甚少。在这里,我们研究了在与野生型同种竞争的情况下,改变幼虫饮食量和环境水源对转基因埃及伊蚊雄蚊交配成功率的综合影响。重要的是,这项研究是在野外环境中使用低世代实验室和野生型品系进行的。
通过控制幼虫饮食(高和低)和饲养水源(野外收集和实验室用水),我们生成了带有荧光精子的转基因埃及伊蚊的四个处理系。然后,将实验室饲养的蚊子与低世代野生型种群在一系列实验室和半野外交配实验中进行竞争。虽然食物数量和幼虫水生环境都不会影响雄性交配适应性,但转基因品系在实验室竞争实验中始终表现优于野生型,这种优势在半野外测试中并未表现出来。
使用模型转基因系统,我们的结果表明,如果仅在某些环境中进行测试,实验室和现场测量交配成功率的实验条件的差异可能导致改性品系的性能能力感知发生变化。虽然实验室和野外品系之间存在许多潜在的变异来源,但在该物种中经过相对较少几代的实验室适应可能会直接影响交配能力,具体取决于测量的环境。我们建议,在野外环境中,可以使用与野外材料的杂交来减轻这些影响。利用大规模生产的改良实验室品系进行释放计划时,应纳入候选品系质量的比较评估。