4.8 Article

Fruitless mutant male mosquitoes gain attraction to human odor

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ELIFE
卷 9, 期 -, 页码 -

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ELIFE SCIENCES PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.7554/eLife.63982

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资金

  1. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  2. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences [UL1 TR000043, UL1 TR001866]
  3. Harvey L Karp Discovery Award
  4. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
  5. Helen Hay Whitney Foundation
  6. National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders [F30DC017658]
  7. National Institute of General Medical Sciences [T32GM007739]
  8. Quadrivium Foundation

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The Aedesaegypti mosquito shows extreme sexual dimorphism in feeding. Only females are attracted to and obtain a blood-meal from humans, which they use to stimulate egg production. The fruitless gene is sex-specifically spliced and encodes a BTB zinc-finger transcription factor proposed to be a master regulator of male courtship and mating behavior across insects. We generated fruitless mutant mosquitoes and showed that males failed to mate, confirming the ancestral function of this gene in male sexual behavior. Remarkably, fruitless males also gain strong attraction to a live human host, a behavior that wild-type males never display, suggesting that male mosquitoes possess the central or peripheral neural circuits required to host-seek and that removing fruitless reveals this latent behavior in males. Our results highlight an unexpected repurposing of a master regulator of male-specific sexual behavior to control one module of female-specific blood-feeding behavior in a deadly vector of infectious diseases.

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