Mosquito heat seeking is driven by an ancestral cooling receptor

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Abstract

Mosquitoes transmit pathogens that kill >700,000 people annually. These insects use body heat to locate and feed on warm-blooded hosts, but the molecular basis of such behavior is unknown. Here, we identify ionotropic receptor IR21a, a receptor conserved throughout insects, as a key mediator of heat seeking in the malaria vector Anopheles gambiae. Although Ir21a mediates heat avoidance in Drosophila, we find it drives heat seeking and heat-stimulated blood feeding in Anopheles. At a cellular level, Ir21a is essential for the detection of cooling, suggesting that during evolution mosquito heat seeking relied on cooling-mediated repulsion. Our data indicate that the evolution of blood feeding in Anopheles involves repurposing an ancestral thermoreceptor from non–blood-feeding Diptera.

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Greppi, C., Laursen, W. J., Budelli, G., Chang, E. C., Daniels, A. M., van Giesen, L., … Garrity, P. A. (2020). Mosquito heat seeking is driven by an ancestral cooling receptor. Science, 367(6478), 681–684. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aay9847

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