HighlanderLab, The Roslin Institute and Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies, The University of Edinburgh, Easter Bush Campus, Midlothian, EH25 9RG, UK.
Developmental Biology Unit, European Molecular Biology Laboratory, Meyerhofstraße 1, 69117, Heidelberg, Germany.
Sci Rep. 2023 Jan 30;13(1):1640. doi: 10.1038/s41598-023-28867-8.
Social insects are very successful invasive species, and the continued increase of global trade and transportation has exacerbated this problem. The yellow-legged hornet, Vespa velutina nigrithorax (henceforth Asian hornet), is drastically expanding its range in Western Europe. As an apex insect predator, this hornet poses a serious threat to the honey bee industry and endemic pollinators. Current suppression methods have proven too inefficient and expensive to limit its spread. Gene drives might be an effective tool to control this species, but their use has not yet been thoroughly investigated in social insects. Here, we built a model that matches the hornet's life history and modelled the effect of different gene drive scenarios on an established invasive population. To test the broader applicability and sensitivity of the model, we also incorporated the invasive European paper wasp Polistes dominula. We find that, due to the haplodiploidy of social hymenopterans, only a gene drive targeting female fertility is promising for population control. Our results show that although a gene drive can suppress a social wasp population, it can only do so under fairly stringent gene drive-specific conditions. This is due to a combination of two factors: first, the large number of surviving offspring that social wasp colonies produce make it possible that, even with very limited formation of resistance alleles, such alleles can quickly spread and rescue the population. Second, due to social wasp life history, infertile individuals do not compete with fertile ones, allowing fertile individuals to maintain a large population size even when drive alleles are widespread. Nevertheless, continued improvements in gene drive technology may make it a promising method for the control of invasive social insects in the future.
社会性昆虫是非常成功的入侵物种,而全球贸易和运输的持续增长加剧了这个问题。黄脚胡蜂(Vespa velutina nigrithorax),又名亚洲大黄蜂,正在西欧范围内急剧扩张其分布范围。作为一种顶级昆虫捕食者,这种胡蜂对蜜蜂产业和本地传粉媒介构成了严重威胁。目前的抑制方法已经被证明效率太低且成本太高,无法限制其传播。基因驱动可能是控制这种物种的有效工具,但它们在社会性昆虫中的应用尚未得到彻底研究。在这里,我们构建了一个模型,该模型匹配了胡蜂的生活史,并模拟了不同基因驱动场景对已建立的入侵种群的影响。为了测试模型的更广泛适用性和敏感性,我们还纳入了入侵的欧洲纸蜂 Polistes dominula。我们发现,由于社会性膜翅目昆虫的单倍二倍体性,只有针对雌性育性的基因驱动才有望用于种群控制。我们的结果表明,尽管基因驱动可以抑制社会性胡蜂种群,但它只能在相当严格的基因驱动特定条件下才能做到这一点。这是由于两个因素的结合:首先,由于社会胡蜂群体产生的大量幸存后代,即使形成的抗性等位基因非常有限,这些等位基因也可以迅速传播并拯救种群。其次,由于社会胡蜂的生活史,不育个体不会与可育个体竞争,从而允许可育个体在驱动等位基因广泛存在的情况下维持较大的种群规模。尽管如此,基因驱动技术的持续改进可能使其成为未来控制入侵社会性昆虫的一种有前途的方法。