Original paper

Non-lethal genotyping in Drosophila suzukii, Zeugodacus cucurbitae, Bactrocera dorsalis, and Aedes aegypti for functional genomics and genetic control

Peng, Peng-Shuai; Häcker, Irina; Gao, Jing-Han; Rehling, Tanja; Petermann, Sarah; Wang, Jin-Jun; Schetelig, Marc F.; Jiang, Hong-Bo; Yan, Ying

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Entomologia Generalis Volume 45 Number 6 (2025), p. 1699 - 1708

published: Dec 4, 2025
published online: Dec 4, 2025
manuscript accepted: Oct 6, 2025
final revised version received: Sep 23, 2025
manuscript revision requested: Jul 2, 2025
manuscript received: Apr 30, 2025

DOI: 10.1127/entomologia/3635

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Abstract

Non-lethal genotyping has advanced ecological and genetic research by enabling molecular analyses without sacrificing specimen viability. Concurrently, genome-editing tools such as the CRISPR/Cas9 system have spurred innovations in pest genetic control. A rapid, efficient, non-invasive genotyping method is therefore essential for functional genomics and genetic control studies. We evaluated tissue-specific genotyping in three economically important fruit flies – Drosophila suzukii, Zeugodacus cucurbitae, and Bactrocera dorsalis – and the public-health pest Aedes aegypti. PCR amplicon yield and quality were compared across up to three tissue types; genotyping accuracy was confirmed by PCR and Sanger sequencing; and effects on survival and reproduction were recorded. Pupal shells provided sufficient DNA for PCR and sequencing without any impact on insect survival or fecundity, whereas other tissues showed trade-offs between genotyping reliability and fitness. Based on these results, we propose optimized non-lethal genotyping protocols that minimize fitness costs, facilitating strain development for pest management and CRISPR-based research.

Keywords

genetic screening • CRISPR/Cas9 • genetic control • insect pests • vector surveillance • tissue sampling • fecundity • ecological monitoring • functional genomics