Mosquitoes always achieve their end: to pump our blood to feed their eggs. If they are so effective at detecting us despite our efforts to repel them, it is because they have an extraordinary olfactory system.
No matter how much we do to protect ourselves from it, the mosquitoes always end up biting us. They are attracted by our smell, CO2 that we expire but also some colors. With so many parameters, theequation to avoid bites becomes hard to solve, even spraying on mosquito repellent doesn’t seem to have any effect. And for good reason, their olfactory system is organized in such a specific way that they cannot miss us, despite our efforts to repel them.
This study, published on August 18 in Cell, brings together several teams from various American universities, all led by Boston University. Their work starts from an observation: if manipulating Genoa involved in vision mosquito makes him “blind”manipulating those of his olfactory system has practically no effect – even deprived of part of their smellthey sting again and again.
The “terribly weird” nose of mosquitoes
And for good reason, the olfactory system of mosquitoes is “terribly weird” in the words of Meg Younger, mosquito specialist and principal investigator of this study. The olfactory system is, according to the canonical vision, composed of a set of olfactory neurons which each express a single receptor for a family of molecule olfactory. A neuron corresponds to an odor.
Meg Younger and her collaborators show that in mosquitoes, the organization of the olfactory system is much more complex. An olfactory neuron can express several odor receptors at the same time. Thus, mutating the gene encoding the CO receptor2 – a major sign for the mosquito of the presence of a human or other animal – does not prevent them from finding their target, because other genes take over in detecting odors.
This research was carried out on mosquitoes from thespecies Aedes aegyptiprobably one of insects the deadliest. Indeed, a harmless bite in most cases can become fatal when it causes the contamination by a virus pathogenic. Aedes aegyptias Aedes albopictus with which it is often confused, and which resembles what is called the tiger mosquito, is the vector of Zika, dengue and chikungunya. These diseases, called arboviruses, claim more than 700,000 victims each year.
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