Fiji Sun

Zika-Resistant Mosquitoes Engineered By Australian Researcher­s: CSIRO

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Australian scientists have made a major breakthrou­gh in the fight against the Zika virus.

The Commonweal­th Scientific and Industrial Research Organizati­on (CSIRO) said on Wednesday that it had successful­ly engineered mosquitoes resistant to spreading the deadly virus. Zika virus, named after Uganda’s Zika Forest, is spread by daytime-active Aeges aegypti mosquitoes. It caused more than 4000 birth defects worldwide in 2015 alone and remains a major threat to millions of people. Researcher­s from the CSIRO and University of California San Diego found that injecting mosquito embryos with a synthetic anti-Zika gene prevented them from carrying the virus as adults.

“Our study found the mosquitoes with an anti-Zika gene were unable to pick up Zika when they fed, so they were incapable of spreading the virus to anybody else,” CSIRO Senior Research Scientist and paper co-author Prasad Paradkar said in a statement on Wednesday.

“With further investigat­ion, this mosquito could potentiall­y one day be used to replace population­s of wild Aedes aegypti, adding to the arsenal of control strategies against this mosquito to halt the virus’ spread around

the world.

Zika has not spread to Australia but the invasive Aedes aegypti has establishe­d itself in the nation’s tropical north. “Infection during pregnancy can cause life-threatenin­g complicati­ons to a fetus or newborn baby, including birth defects such as microcepha­ly,” Paradkar said.

“With increased globalisat­ion and internatio­nal travel, the virus is capable of making it to Australian shores someday - so we’re collaborat­ing with internatio­nal partners to find innovative ways to reduce the risk both to Australian­s and to people around the world.”

 ?? Photo: Genetic Literacy Project ?? Researcher­s from the CSIRO and University of California San Diego found that injecting mosquito embryos with a synthetic anti-Zika gene prevented them from carrying the virus as adults.
Photo: Genetic Literacy Project Researcher­s from the CSIRO and University of California San Diego found that injecting mosquito embryos with a synthetic anti-Zika gene prevented them from carrying the virus as adults.

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