Opportunity to hurt mosquitoes but spare beneficial insects
From: University of California,
Riverside
By Jules Bernstein
June 14, 2022 – A UC
Riverside genetic discovery could turn disease-carrying
mosquitoes into insect Peter Pans, preventing them from ever maturing or
multiplying.
In 2018, UCR
entomologist Naoki Yamanaka found, contrary to accepted scientific wisdom, that
an important steroid hormone requires transporter proteins to enter or exit
fruit fly cells. The hormone, ecdysone, is called the “molting hormone.”
Without it, flies will never mature, or reproduce.
Before his discovery,
textbooks taught that ecdysone travels freely across cell membranes, slipping
past them with ease. “We now know that’s not true,” Yamanaka said.
Every insect species
requires ecdysone for some aspect of their journey from egg to
offspring-producing adult. And every insect that Yamanaka has tested also
possesses the ecdysone transporter that he found in 2018, plus a few more found
in a new study. But in this new study, he found mosquitoes to be different.
Mosquitoes have only
three of the four transporter proteins that fruit flies possess. They lack the
most important, primary ecdysone transporter.
“This primary one is
somehow, mysteriously, missing in mosquitoes,” Yamanaka said.
These findings have now
been published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences.
The discovery opens the
door to a mosquito-specific insecticide that would not harm beneficial bees or
other pollinators. It would, however, affect mosquitoes like the ones used in
the study, Aedes aegypti, which spread Zika, dengue, yellow fever, chikungunya
and other viruses.
“We can develop
chemicals to block the functions of these ecdysone transporters but do not
affect the original transporter that is so key for other insects,” Yamanaka
said. “The chances for off-target effects would be low.”
A related UC Riverside
study, led by cell biologist Sachiko Haga-Yamanaka, is attempting to locate
similar hormone transporting machinery in humans.
“Textbooks say that
steroid hormones transport freely into and out of human cells, but based on our
insect research, we doubt that to be the case,” Yamanaka said.
Yamanaka’s research has
been funded by the National Institutes of Health. His laboratory is now
screening for chemicals that can block mosquitoes’ ecdysone importers. He is
also investigating ecdysone transporters in other animals.
Other methods do exist
of ensuring local populations of mosquitoes cannot breed. Releasing sterile,
irradiated male mosquitoes into the wild to mate with females results in eggs
that do not hatch, a technique that eliminates the need for insecticides.
Though there are
effective methods like this for controlling local populations of mosquitoes,
Yamanaka feels it is important to develop additional tools so we can handle
mosquito-related issues in many different scenarios.
“It is impossible to
make mosquitoes go extinct,” Yamanaka said. “Depending on one tool to control
them is dangerous. As the climate heats up, it creates even more favorable
conditions for them to multiply, and they’re only likely to become a bigger
problem, especially in Southern California.”
https://news.ucr.edu/articles/2022/06/14/genetic-discovery-could-spell-mosquitoes-death-knell
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