Abstract

Sterile male Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni (Froggatt), fed as immature adults on the plant compound raspberry ketone (RK), show a reduced attraction to cuelure, a synthetic analogue of RK used as an attractant in Male Annihilation Technique. We hypothesized the reduced attraction of RK-fed adult males to cuelure may be a consequence of altered expression of chemoreception genes. A Y-tube olfactometer assay with RK-fed and RK-unfed sterile B. tryoni males tested the subsequent behavioural response to cuelure. Behavioral assays confirmed a significant decrease in attraction of RK-fed sterile males to cuelure. RK-fed, non-responders (to cue-lure) and RK-unfed, responders (to cue-lure) males were sampled and gene expression compared by de novo RNA-seq analysis. A total of 269 genes in fly heads were differentially expressed between replicated groups of RK-fed, cuelure non-responders and RK-unfed, cuelure responders. Among them, 218 genes including 4 chemoreceptor genes were up regulated and 51 genes were down regulated in RK-fed, cuelure non-responders. De novo assembly generated many genes with unknown functions and no significant BLAST hits to homologues in other species. The enriched and suppressed genes reported here, shed light on the transcriptional changes that affect the dynamics of insect responses to chemical stimuli.

Highlights

  • Sterile male Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni (Froggatt), fed as immature adults on the plant compound raspberry ketone (RK), show a reduced attraction to cuelure, a synthetic analogue of RK used as an attractant in Male Annihilation Technique

  • The objective of this study was first to investigate the behavioural response of RK-fed and RK-unfed sterile male B. tryoni to cuelure using a Y-tube olfactometer, and to investigate whether the genes of RK-fed non-responders and RK-unfed responders were associated with changes in the transcriptome

  • There was a significant effect of feeding RK on the choice made by sterile male B. tryoni when exposed to cuelure in the Y- tube olfactometer (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Sterile male Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni (Froggatt), fed as immature adults on the plant compound raspberry ketone (RK), show a reduced attraction to cuelure, a synthetic analogue of RK used as an attractant in Male Annihilation Technique. The number of sterile flies released in SIT programs can be modified based on the density of wild male individuals, which are most effective when wild population densities are ­low[6,7]. For this reason, MAT is used to reduce wild male numbers prior to S­ IT2. The genetic basis for this effect has not been investigated, despite its relevance to the practical management of Tephritidae pests

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