4.6 Article

A transgenic embryonic sexing system for Anastrepha suspensa (Diptera: Tephritidae)

Journal

INSECT BIOCHEMISTRY AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
Volume 42, Issue 10, Pages 790-795

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ibmb.2012.07.007

Keywords

Female-specific lethality; Apoptosis; Cell death; Sterile Insect Technique; Insect pest management

Funding

  1. USDA-APHIS-PPQ
  2. USDA-NIFA-Agriculture and Food Research Initiative

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The Sterile Insect Technique (SIT) is a highly successful biologically-based strategy to control pest insect populations that relies on the large-scale release of sterilized males to render females in the field nonreproductive. For medfly, a mutant-based sexing system is available as well as a transgenic system where a tetracycline-suppressible (Tet-off) toxic molecule is female-specifically produced. However, the former classical genetic system took many years to refine, and the latter system results in female death by a poorly understood mechanism, primarily in the pupal stage after rearing costs have been incurred. Here we describe a Tet-off transgenic embryonic sexing system (TESS) for Anastrepha suspensa that uses a driver construct having the promoter from the embryo-specific A. suspensa serendipity a gene, linked to the Tet-transactivator. This was used to drive the expression of a phospho-mutated variant of the proapoptotic cell death gene, Alhid, from Anastrepha ludens. The system uses a sex-specific intron splicing cassette linked to a cell death gene lethal effector. Progeny from TESS strains heterozygous for the transgene combination were 80-100% males, whereas four double homozygous TESS strains had 100% male-only progeny, with female death limited primarily to embryogenesis. In a large-scale test, more than 30,000 eggs from two strains resulted in 100% male-only progeny. The transgenic sexing approach described here is highly effective and cost-efficient by eliminating most, if not all, female insects early in embryogenesis using a well-characterized apoptotic mechanism. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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