| Literature DB >> 23527029 |
Oreenaiza Nordin1, Wesley Donald, Wong Hong Ming, Teoh Guat Ney, Khairul Asuad Mohamed, Nor Azlina Abdul Halim, Peter Winskill, Azahari Abdul Hadi, Zulkamal Safi'in Muhammad, Renaud Lacroix, Sarah Scaife, Andrew Robert McKemey, Camilla Beech, Murad Shahnaz, Luke Alphey, Derric David Nimmo, Wasi Ahmed Nazni, Han Lim Lee.
Abstract
Dengue is the most important mosquito-borne viral disease. No specific treatment or vaccine is currently available; traditional vector control methods can rarely achieve adequate control. Recently, the RIDL (Release of Insect carrying Dominant Lethality) approach has been developed, based on the sterile insect technique, in which genetically engineered 'sterile' homozygous RIDL male insects are released to mate wild females; the offspring inherit a copy of the RIDL construct and die. A RIDL strain of the dengue mosquito, Aedes aegypti, OX513A, expresses a fluorescent marker gene for identification (DsRed2) and a protein (tTAV) that causes the offspring to die. We examined whether these proteins could adversely affect predators that may feed on the insect. Aedes aegypti is a peri-domestic mosquito that typically breeds in small, rain-water-filled containers and has no specific predators. Toxorhynchites larvae feed on small aquatic organisms and are easily reared in the laboratory where they can be fed exclusively on mosquito larvae. To evaluate the effect of a predator feeding on a diet of RIDL insects, OX513A Ae. aegypti larvae were fed to two different species of Toxorhynchites (Tx. splendens and Tx. amboinensis) and effects on life table parameters of all life stages were compared to being fed on wild type larvae. No significant negative effect was observed on any life table parameter studied; this outcome and the benign nature of the expressed proteins (tTAV and DsRed2) indicate that Ae. aegypti OX513A RIDL strain is unlikely to have any adverse effects on predators in the environment.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23527029 PMCID: PMC3604150 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0058805
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Box plot summary of development time (days) of different life stages.
Minimum and maximum development time are shown by vertical lines, the upper and lower quartiles are shown by the bottom and top of box respectively, the median is represented by horizontal line inside box; where the median value is the same as the upper and lower quartile the top of the gray or the bottom of the white box represents the median. Individuals for which sex could not be determined due to death prior to adult emergence were excluded from this analysis, these unclassified individuals represented at most 43% of each type and averaged 26.6% (see Table S1 for complete dataset. There was a significant difference in L4 larval development time between Tx. amboinensis and Tx. splendens.
Figure 2Box plot of adult survival (days).
Minimum and maximum survival are shown by vertical lines, the upper and lower quartiles are shown by the bottom and top of box respectively, the median is represented by horizontal line inside the box. No significant difference was observed for adult survival between treatments or species.
Figure 3Wing length results summarised in a box plot.
Wing lengths for each adult are the average of the left and right wing measurements. Minimum and maximum wing lengths are shown by vertical lines, the upper and lower quartiles are shown by the bottom and top of box respectively, the median is represented by the horizontal line inside the box. Females that were fed on WT larvae (Control) were significantly smaller than females that were fed on RIDL larvae reared off-tetracycline (OFF-TET), highlighted by asterisk. No other significant differences were observed.