Abstract

BackgroundPest eradication using the Sterile Insect Technique (SIT) involves high-density releases of sterilized males that mate with wild females and ultimately suppress the population. Sterilized females are not required for SIT and their removal or separation from males prior to release remains challenging. In order to develop genetic sexing strains (GSS), conditional traits such as temperature sensitive lethality are required.ResultsHere we introduce a known Drosophila melanogaster temperature sensitive embryonic lethal mutation into Bactrocera tryoni, a serious horticultural pest in Australia. A non-synonymous point mutation in the D. melanogaster gene shibire causes embryonic lethality at 29 °C and we successfully used CRISPR/Cas9 technology to recreate the orthologous shibire temperature sensitive-1 (shits1) mutation in B. tryoni. Genotypic analyses over three generations revealed that a high fitness cost was associated with the shits1 mutant allele and shits1 homozygotes were not viable at 21 °C, which is a more severe phenotype than that documented in D. melanogaster.ConclusionsWe have demonstrated the first successful use of CRISPR/Cas9 to introduce precise single base substitutions in an endogenous gene via homology-directed repair in an agricultural pest insect and this technology can be used to trial other conditional mutations for the ultimate aim of generating genetic sexing strains for SIT.

Highlights

  • Pest eradication using the Sterile Insect Technique (SIT) involves high-density releases of sterilized males that mate with wild females and suppress the population

  • This scaffold has been mapped to one end of the B. tryoni chromosome 5 [21], which is homologous to the D. melanogaster X where the D. melanogaster shibire gene is located

  • The amino acid residue (Glycine-268) that causes temperature sensitivity in D. melanogaster when mutated to aspartic acid is conserved in the B. tryoni shibire ortholog (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Pest eradication using the Sterile Insect Technique (SIT) involves high-density releases of sterilized males that mate with wild females and suppress the population. Sterilized females are not required for SIT and their removal or separation from males prior to release remains challenging. In order to develop genetic sexing strains (GSS), conditional traits such as temperature sensitive lethality are required. Area wide integrated pest management programmes to control B. tryoni include the use of Sterile Insect Technique (SIT), which was first proposed by E. F. Kipling as a method of controlling insect populations [2]. SIT has been widely used to suppress or eradicate numerous pest. An effective visual or inducible trait, such as embryonic temperature sensitive lethality, has to be

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