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1.
PLoS One ; 7(12): e50922, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23226548

ABSTRACT

The sterile insect technique (SIT) is an environmentally friendly method of pest control in which insects are mass-produced, irradiated and released to mate with wild counterparts. SIT has been used to control major pest insects including the pink bollworm (Pectinophora gossypiella Saunders), a global pest of cotton. Transgenic technology has the potential to overcome disadvantages associated with the SIT, such as the damaging effects of radiation on released insects. A method called RIDL (Release of Insects carrying a Dominant Lethal) is designed to circumvent the need to irradiate insects before release. Premature death of insects' progeny can be engineered to provide an equivalent to sterilisation. Moreover, this trait can be suppressed by the provision of a dietary antidote. In the pink bollworm, we generated transformed strains using different DNA constructs, which showed moderate-to-100% engineered mortality. In permissive conditions, this effect was largely suppressed. Survival data on cotton in field cages indicated that field conditions increase the lethal effect. One strain, called OX3402C, showed highly penetrant and highly repressible lethality, and was tested on host plants where its larvae caused minimal damage before death. These results highlight a potentially valuable insecticide-free tool against pink bollworm, and indicate its potential for development in other lepidopteran pests.


Subject(s)
Genetic Engineering/methods , Gossypium/parasitology , Lepidoptera/physiology , Pest Control, Biological/methods , Animals , Animals, Genetically Modified , Blotting, Southern , Fluorescence , Heterozygote , Homozygote , Larva/genetics , Phenotype , Pupa/genetics , Survival Analysis , Transformation, Genetic , Transgenes/genetics
2.
BMC Biol ; 5: 11, 2007 Mar 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17374148

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Reduction or elimination of vector populations will tend to reduce or eliminate transmission of vector-borne diseases. One potential method for environmentally-friendly, species-specific population control is the Sterile Insect Technique (SIT). SIT has not been widely used against insect disease vectors such as mosquitoes, in part because of various practical difficulties in rearing, sterilization and distribution. Additionally, vector populations with strong density-dependent effects will tend to be resistant to SIT-based control as the population-reducing effect of induced sterility will tend to be offset by reduced density-dependent mortality. RESULTS: We investigated by mathematical modeling the effect of manipulating the stage of development at which death occurs (lethal phase) in an SIT program against a density-dependence-limited insect population. We found late-acting lethality to be considerably more effective than early-acting lethality. No such strains of a vector insect have been described, so as a proof-of-principle we constructed a strain of the principal vector of the dengue and yellow fever viruses, Aedes (Stegomyia) aegypti, with the necessary properties of dominant, repressible, highly penetrant, late-acting lethality. CONCLUSION: Conventional SIT induces early-acting (embryonic) lethality, but genetic methods potentially allow the lethal phase to be tailored to the program. For insects with strong density-dependence, we show that lethality after the density-dependent phase would be a considerable improvement over conventional methods. For density-dependent parameters estimated from field data for Aedes aegypti, the critical release ratio for population elimination is modeled to be 27% to 540% greater for early-acting rather than late-acting lethality. Our success in developing a mosquito strain with the key features that the modeling indicated were desirable demonstrates the feasibility of this approach for improved SIT for disease control.


Subject(s)
Aedes/genetics , Aedes/physiology , Genes, Dominant/genetics , Genes, Lethal/genetics , Mosquito Control/methods , Aedes/growth & development , Animals , Animals, Genetically Modified , Female , Genetic Engineering , Infertility/genetics , Infertility/physiopathology , Larva/genetics , Larva/physiology , Longevity/genetics , Longevity/physiology , Male , Models, Biological , Population Density , Pupa/genetics , Pupa/physiology , Tetracycline/pharmacology , Time Factors
3.
Nat Biotechnol ; 25(3): 353-7, 2007 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17322873

ABSTRACT

The Sterile Insect Technique is a species-specific and environmentally friendly method of pest control involving mass release of sterilized insects that reduce the wild population through infertile matings. Insects carrying a female-specific autocidal genetic system offer an attractive alternative to conventional sterilization methods while also eliminating females from the release population. We exploited sex-specific alternative splicing in insects to engineer female-specific autocidal genetic systems in the Mediterranean fruit fly, Ceratitis capitata. These rely on the insertion of cassette exons from the C. capitata transformer gene into a heterologous tetracycline-repressible transactivator such that the transactivator transcript is disrupted in male splice variants but not in the female-specific one. As the key components of these systems function across a broad phylogenetic range, this strategy addresses the paucity of sex-specific expression systems (e.g., early-acting, female-specific promoters) in insects other than Drosophila melanogaster. The approach may have wide applicability for regulating gene expression in other organisms, particularly for combinatorial control with appropriate promoters.


Subject(s)
Alternative Splicing , Ceratitis capitata/genetics , Infertility, Female/genetics , Insect Control/methods , Nuclear Proteins/genetics , Transcription, Genetic/drug effects , Animals , Animals, Genetically Modified , Drosophila Proteins , Female , Gene Expression Regulation/drug effects , Population Dynamics , Sex Factors , Tetracycline/metabolism
4.
Nat Biotechnol ; 24(7): 820-1, 2006 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16823373

ABSTRACT

Methods involving the release of transgenic insects in the field hold great promise for controlling vector-borne diseases and agricultural pests. Insect transformation depends on nonautonomous transposable elements as gene vectors. The resulting insertions are stable in the absence of suitable transposase, however, such absence cannot always be guaranteed. We describe a method for post-integration elimination of all transposon sequences in the pest insect Medfly, Ceratitis capitata. The resulting insertions lack transposon sequences and are therefore impervious to transposase activity.


Subject(s)
Ceratitis capitata/genetics , DNA Transposable Elements/genetics , Gene Deletion , Genetic Vectors/genetics , Genomic Instability/genetics , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed/methods , Animals , Animals, Genetically Modified/genetics , Genetic Engineering/methods , Transposases/genetics
5.
Nat Biotechnol ; 23(4): 453-6, 2005 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15750586

ABSTRACT

The Sterile Insect Technique (SIT) used to control insect pests relies on the release of large numbers of radiation-sterilized insects. Irradiation can have a negative impact on the subsequent performance of the released insects and therefore on the cost and effectiveness of a control program. This and other problems associated with current SIT programs could be overcome by the use of recombinant DNA methods and molecular genetics. Here we describe the construction of strains of the Mediterranean fruit fly (medfly) harboring a tetracycline-repressible transactivator (tTA) that causes lethality in early developmental stages of the heterozygous progeny but has little effect on the survival of the parental transgenic tTA insects. We show that these properties should prove advantageous for the implementation of insect pest control programs.


Subject(s)
Ceratitis capitata/genetics , Genes, Dominant , Genes, Insect , Genes, Lethal , Insect Control/methods , Animals , Animals, Genetically Modified , Ceratitis capitata/growth & development , Crosses, Genetic , DNA Transposable Elements , Embryo, Nonmammalian , Heterozygote , Microinjections , Models, Biological , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutagenesis, Insertional , Plasmids , Tetracycline/metabolism , Trans-Activators/genetics , Trans-Activators/metabolism , Transformation, Genetic
6.
Endocrinology ; 144(3): 1062-73, 2003 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12586783

ABSTRACT

Annexin 1 (ANXA1) has a well-demonstrated role in early delayed inhibitory feedback of glucocorticoids in the pituitary. ANXA1 is located in folliculo-stellate (FS) cells, and glucocorticoids act on these cells to externalize and stimulate the synthesis of ANXA1. However, ANXA1 lacks a signal sequence so the mechanism by which ANXA1 is externalized from FS cells was unknown and has been investigated. The ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters are a large group of transporters with varied roles that include the externalization of proteins. Glucocorticoid-induced externalization of ANXA1 from an FS cell line (TtT/GF) and rat anterior pituitary was blocked by glyburide, which inhibits ABC transporters. Glyburide also blocked the glucocorticoid inhibition of forskolin-stimulated ACTH release from pituitary tissue in vitro. RT-PCR revealed mRNA and Western blotting demonstrated protein for the ATP binding cassette A1 (ABCA1) transporter in mouse FS, TtT/GF, and A549 lung adenocarcinoma cells from which glucocorticoids also induce externalization of ANXA1. In TtT/GF cells, immunofluorescence labeling revealed a near total colocalization of cell surface ANXA1 and ABCA1. We conclude that ANXA1, which mediates the early delayed feedback of glucocorticoids in the anterior pituitary, is externalized from FS cells by an ABC transporter and that the ABCA1 transporter is a likely candidate.


Subject(s)
ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters/physiology , Annexin A1/metabolism , Pituitary Gland, Anterior/metabolism , ATP Binding Cassette Transporter 1 , ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters/analysis , ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters/genetics , Adenocarcinoma , Adrenocorticotropic Hormone/metabolism , Animals , Biological Transport/drug effects , Blotting, Western , Cell Line , Dexamethasone/pharmacology , Fluorescent Antibody Technique , Glucocorticoids/pharmacology , Glyburide/pharmacology , Lung Neoplasms , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Microscopy, Electron , Pituitary Gland, Anterior/drug effects , RNA, Messenger/analysis , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction , Tumor Cells, Cultured
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