I suspect that this is a long way from been bad news for mosquitoes, but it is at least another tool. Scent attracts them and though the thought is to attract them away, when they are thick on the ground it is hard to see how this will produce much effect. Everyone also forgets that they occupy a three dimensional world. No one has ever figured out how to provide overhead protection in the open air short of building it.
However, it may become an effective lure within confined spaces. Something that can induce mosquitoes indoors to fly in to a trap should work well. It beats chasing them down.
Even better would be to find a way to over load all those olfactory sensors in an area in such a way so as not to attract every mosquito available.
In short, it will not be easy but it is at least promising.
Bad News For Mosquitoes
by Staff Writers
These olfactory receptors in the mosquito Anopheles gambiae offer scientists potential new targets for repelling, confusing or attracting into traps the mosquitoes that spread a disease afflicting up to 500 million people across a broad swath of the world's tropical regions, according to authors of the article published online Feb. 3 in the journal Nature.
"The world desperately needs new ways of controlling these mosquitoes, ways that are effective, inexpensive, and environmentally friendly," said John Carlson, the Eugene Higgins Professor of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology at Yale and senior author of the study. "Some of these receptors could be excellent targets for controlling mosquito behavior."
While it has long been known that mosquitoes are attracted to human scents, just how the mosquito's olfactory system detects the different chemical elements of human odor has been unknown.
"Mosquitoes find us through their sense of smell, but we know very little about how they do this," Carlson said. "Here in the United States , mosquitoes are a source of annoyance, but in much of the world they're a source of death."
Carlson's lab identified the first insect odor receptors in 1999 in studies of the fruit fly. The Yale team then found an ingenious way to use the fruit fly to study how the mosquito olfactory system works: They used mutant flies that were missing an odor receptor. Under the leadership of Allison Carey, an M.D./Ph.D. candidate in Carlson's lab and lead author of the study, the researchers systematically activated genes of 72 mosquito odor receptors in fruit fly olfactory cells that lacked their own receptors. The engineered flies were then exposed to a battery of scent compounds, and the responses conferred by each receptor were analyzed. Over the course of the project, Carey recorded 27,000 electrical responses in the genetically engineered fly/mosquito olfactory system to the library of scents.
Particularly strong responses were recorded from 27 receptors - and most of these receptors responded to chemical compounds found in human sweat.
"We're now screening for compounds that interact with these receptors," Carlson said. "Compounds that jam these receptors could impair the ability of mosquitoes to find us. Compounds that excite some of these receptors could help lure mosquitoes into traps or repel them. The best lures or repellents may be cocktails of multiple compounds."
Carey says that more knowledge about mosquito behavior and odor reception will help develop more effective traps and repellents.
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