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Quantitative genetic analysis of attractiveness of yeast products to Drosophila

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posted on 2024-04-26, 14:56 authored by Weiru Yan, Yishen Li, Edward J Louis, Charalambos KyriacouCharalambos Kyriacou, Yue Hu, Rebecca L Cordell, Xiaodong Xie

An attractive perfume is a complex mixture of compounds, some of which may be unpleasant on their own. This is also true for the volatile combinations from yeast fermentation products in vineyards and orchards when assessed by Drosophila. Here we used crosses between a yeast strain with an attractive fermentation profile and another strain with a repulsive one and tested flies responses using a T-maze. QTL analysis reveals allelic variation in four yeast genes, PTC6, SAT4, YFL040W, and ARI1, that modulated expression levels of volatile compounds (assessed by GC-MS) and in different combinations, generated various levels of attractiveness. The parent strain that is more attractive to Drosophila has repulsive alleles at two of the loci while the least attractive parent has attractive alleles. Behavioral assays using artificial mixtures mimicking the composition of odors from fermentation validated the results of GC-MS and QTL mapping, thereby directly connecting genetic variation in yeast to attractiveness in flies. This study can be used as a basis for dissecting the combination of olfactory receptors that mediate the attractiveness/repulsion of flies to yeast volatiles and may also serve as a model for testing the attractiveness of pest species such as Drosophila suzukii to their host fruit.

History

Author affiliation

College of Science & Engineering/Chemistry

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

GENETICS

Pagination

iyae048

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

issn

0016-6731

eissn

1943-2631

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2024-04-26

Editors

Long A

Spatial coverage

United States

Language

en

Deposited by

Professor Charalambos Kyriacou

Deposit date

2024-04-25

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