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Short Communication: Comparative fitness assessment of Anopheles stephensi transgenic lines receptive to site-specific integration

Author(s): 
D. A. Amenya, M. Bonizzoni, A. T. Isaacs, N. Jasinskiene, H. Chen, O. Marinotti, G. Yan, A. A. James
Reference: 
Insect Molecular Biology, Volume 19, Issue 2,April 2010, Pages: 263-269
Contact email: 
aajames@uci.edu

Genetically modified mosquitoes that are unable to transmit pathogens offer opportunities for controlling vector-borne diseases such as malaria and dengue. Site-specific gene recombination technologies are advantageous in the development of these insects because antipathogen effector genes can be inserted at integration sites in the genome that cause the least alteration in mosquito fitness. Here we describe Anopheles stephensi transgenic lines containing φC31 attP'docking' sites linked to a fluorescent marker gene. Chromosomal insertion sites were determined and life-table parameters were assessed for transgenic mosquitoes of each line. No significant differences in fitness between the transgenic and nontransgenic mosquitoes were detected in this study. These transgenic lines are suitable for future site-specific integrations of antiparasite transgenes into the attP sites