Current:Home > FinanceMosquitoes surprise researcher with their 'weird' sense of smell -Global Finance Compass
Mosquitoes surprise researcher with their 'weird' sense of smell
View
Date:2025-04-13 07:41:36
A new study published in Thursday's edition of Cell reports that a mosquito's sense of smell is more complicated than we once thought. And it may explain how this pesky insect is so good at seeking you out at a barbecue or in your bedroom, and digging its proboscis into your skin — as well as lead to new strategies to ward off the potentially deadly diseases transmitted by its bite.
Meg Younger, a neuroscientist at Boston University, is co-author of the study. When I visited her lab, she introduced me to her subjects, opening up a large incubator set to a balmy 80 degrees. Cubes, each a foot square and stretched with fine white mesh, are packed onto the shelves. Each cube is filled with 100-plus mosquitoes.
"I showed this to a friend the other day," Younger says with a smile. And her friend said it looked "like a mosquito hotel." It's safe to say that Younger is the de facto hotel manager. She places one of the mosquito-filled cubes on a lab bench, and exhales gently into it. A waft of carbon dioxide blows across the insects, and they go wild.
"They all get up and fly around and they'll do that for a few minutes," Younger explains. "And now, in this state, they're sensitized to look for other cues." Cues that would steer them to a target like the complex blend of human body odor — an aroma that's magnetic to a mosquito.
In many parts of the world, this attraction isn't merely a nuisance for humans. It's a major health problem. "The ones that prefer humans tend to be the ones that transmit diseases among humans," Younger says. These ailments include dengue, Zika, chikungunya and malaria. The latter disease alone causes over half a million deaths each year.
So scientists have attempted to break this attraction. But try as they might, the little mosquito has resisted. "They're really good at what they do," Younger says. Mutate a mosquito so it's insensitive to carbon dioxide — which primes them to scan for cues like odor — or fiddle with portions of its ability to smell and it can still zero in on people and bite them.
Younger admits it's been frustratingly hard to find chemical means of battling mosquitoes. "We've hit on certain things at random," she says, such as what led to DEET. "And if we were able to learn [more about] how mosquitoes are finding people, the more potential starting points we'll have to develop these new repellents or conversely, attractants for traps."
By peering into the mosquito's brain to decipher how it smells its surroundings, Younger and her colleagues — Leslie Vosshall of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Rockefeller University, Margo Herre of Rockefeller University, and Olivia Goldman of Rockefeller University — have taken steps to do just that.
Most of what we know about the neuroscience of smell comes from mice and fruit flies, where the wiring's fairly simple. Each neuron in the nose or antenna has one kind of receptor that detects a single kind of odor — say, a banana. And all the neurons with receptors for the banana smell connect to the same part of the brain.
Of course, there are hundreds of different receptors responding to countless odors. But this mechanism of one kind of receptor per neuron has been the party line for how smell generally works. Until Younger and the others started poking around inside mosquito brains, where she found that each neuron has multiple receptors that can detect multiple odors.
"I saw this and in my head, I was like, 'This is weird,'" she says. "And I just thought, 'Huh, weird is good.' Cause it's fun to study something that's new and different and it's fun to be surprised."
Younger thinks this finding that a mosquito's sense of smell is organized differently than expected (i.e., many neurons house multiple receptors instead of one) may explain why its ability to sniff people out is so tamper-proof. It gives the insect a kind of built-in redundancy in the system. For instance, Younger speculates that because humans all smell different than one another, mosquitoes may rely on this redundancy to broaden their target of what a person smells like.
This work could give researchers additional ways to thwart the bugs, like developing traps that contain new fragrance blends that are more alluring than people.
"It's an enormous study," says Josefina del Marmol, a molecular neurobiologist at the Harvard Medical School who wasn't involved with the research. She says there's more work to be done to verify, neuron by neuron, that each one actually responds to all the odors it has receptors for.
But she applauds the central finding. "It really does change a lot about what we know of how insects perceive the world," del Marmol says. "It's a lot more complex than we thought."
In her lab, Meg Younger stares at the mosquitoes darting about inside that hotel. And she can't help but marvel at the complexity tucked into a brain less than a millimeter across.
"You know, nervous systems are so powerful," she considers aloud, "that even one that's so small allows for so much."
veryGood! (76)
Related
- 'Squid Game' without subtitles? Duolingo, Netflix encourage fans to learn Korean
- Kathie Lee Gifford reveals she's recovering from 'painful' hip replacement surgery
- Carlos Alcaraz beats Novak Djokovic at Wimbledon men's final to win fourth Grand Slam title
- Police officer encountered Trump shooter on roof before rampage, report says
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- 'Red-blooded American' Paul Skenes makes Air Force proud at MLB All-Star Game
- Miranda Lambert Stops Concert Again to Call Out Fans Causing Drama
- Hamas says Gaza cease-fire talks haven't paused and claims military chief survived Israeli strike
- Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
- Paul Skenes in spotlight, starting All-Star Game after just 11 major league games
Ranking
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Home Run Derby's nail-biting finish had Teoscar Hernandez, Bobby Witt's families on edge
- California needs a million EV charging stations — but that’s ‘unlikely’ and ‘unrealistic’
- New Jersey Democrats set to pick candidate in special House primary for Donald Payne Jr.'s seat
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- 2024 British Open tee times: When do Tiger Woods, Rory McIlroy tee off?
- BBC Journalist John Hunt Speaks Out After Wife, Daughters Are Killed in Crossbow Attack
- North Carolina approves party seeking to put RFK Jr. on the ballot, rejects effort for Cornel West
Recommendation
Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
Man who filmed deadly torture gets 226 years in prison for killings of 2 Alaska women: In my movies, everybody always dies
Horoscopes Today, July 15, 2024
More thunderstorms expected Tuesday after storms clobber Midwest, tornado confirmed
Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
Amazon's Prime Day Deals on Amazon Devices: Fire Sticks for $24, Fire Tablets for $74 & More
Tesla's Cybertruck outsells Ford's F-150 Lightning in second quarter
See full RNC roll call of states vote results for the 2024 Republican nomination