By deleting a single gene within the butterfly genome, a team of researchers has altered the insect's wing coloration pattern, the Washington Post reports.
Researchers led by George Washington University's Arnaud Martin report in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences that they used the CRISPR gene-editing tool to knockout the WntA signaling gene in seven butterfly species. Removing this one gene led to a variety of changes in wing coloration patterns across the butterfly species, they report.
As the New York Times notes, the speckled wood and buckeye butterflies lost their central symmetry system band from their wings, while monarch butterflies had a white pigment bleeding into orange regions. The authors note in their paper that their findings suggest WntA has evolved multiple roles in wing patterning.
"It's extraordinary that it works so broadly," author Owen McMillan from the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute tells the Post. "It's getting rewired across nymphalids [a family of butterflies] in really fundamentally different ways."
Martin adds that they are using the wing patterns "as a proxy to understand fundamental rules about the function of genes."