Insect transgenesis is continuously being improved to increase the efficacy of population suppression and replacement strategies directed to the control of insect species of economic and sanitary interest. An essential prerequisite for the success of both pest control applications is that the fitness of the transformant individuals is not impaired, so that, once released in the field, they can efficiently compete with or even out-compete their wild-type counterparts for matings in order to reduce the population size, or to spread desirable genes into the target population. Recent research has shown that the production of fit and competitive transformants can now be achieved and that transgenes may not necessarily confer a fitness cost. In this article we review the most recent published results of the fitness assessment of different transgenic insect lines and underline the necessity to fulfill key requirements of ecological safety. Fitness evaluation studies performed in field cages and medium/large-scale rearing will validate the present encouraging laboratory results, giving an indication of the performance of the transgenic insect genotype after release in pest control programmes.

Safe and fit genetically modified insects for pest control: From lab to field applications / F. Scolari, P. Siciliano, P. Gabrieli, L.M. Gomulski, A. Bonomi, G. Gasperi, A.R. Malacrida. - In: GENETICA. - ISSN 0016-6707. - 139:1(2011), pp. 41-52. [10.1007/s10709-010-9483-7]

Safe and fit genetically modified insects for pest control: From lab to field applications

P. Gabrieli;
2011

Abstract

Insect transgenesis is continuously being improved to increase the efficacy of population suppression and replacement strategies directed to the control of insect species of economic and sanitary interest. An essential prerequisite for the success of both pest control applications is that the fitness of the transformant individuals is not impaired, so that, once released in the field, they can efficiently compete with or even out-compete their wild-type counterparts for matings in order to reduce the population size, or to spread desirable genes into the target population. Recent research has shown that the production of fit and competitive transformants can now be achieved and that transgenes may not necessarily confer a fitness cost. In this article we review the most recent published results of the fitness assessment of different transgenic insect lines and underline the necessity to fulfill key requirements of ecological safety. Fitness evaluation studies performed in field cages and medium/large-scale rearing will validate the present encouraging laboratory results, giving an indication of the performance of the transgenic insect genotype after release in pest control programmes.
No
English
Fitness; Transgenesis; SIT; Population replacement
Settore BIO/05 - Zoologia
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Ricerca di base
Pubblicazione scientifica
2011
20-ago-2010
139
1
41
52
12
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Safe and fit genetically modified insects for pest control: From lab to field applications / F. Scolari, P. Siciliano, P. Gabrieli, L.M. Gomulski, A. Bonomi, G. Gasperi, A.R. Malacrida. - In: GENETICA. - ISSN 0016-6707. - 139:1(2011), pp. 41-52. [10.1007/s10709-010-9483-7]
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Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
7
262
Article (author)
Periodico con Impact Factor
F. Scolari, P. Siciliano, P. Gabrieli, L.M. Gomulski, A. Bonomi, G. Gasperi, A.R. Malacrida
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/769965
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