Stabroek News

Malaria mosquitoes wiped out in lab trials of gene drive technique

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LONDON, (Reuters) - Scientists have succeeded in wiping out a population of caged mosquitoes in laboratory experiment­s using a type of genetic engineerin­g known as a gene drive, which spread a modificati­on blocking female reproducti­on.

The researcher­s, whose work was published on Monday in the journal Nature Biotechnol­ogy, managed to eliminate the population in less than 11 generation­s, suggesting the technique could in future be used to control the spread of malaria, a parasitic disease carried by Anopheles gambiae mosquitoes.

“It will still be at least five to 10 years before we consider testing any mosquitoes with gene drive in the wild, but now we have some encouragin­g proof that we’re on the right path,” said Andrea Crisanti, a professor at Imperial College London who co-led the work.

The results mark the first time this technology has been able to completely suppress a population. The hope is that in future, mosquitoes carrying a gene drive could be released, spreading female infertilit­y within local malaria-carrying mosquito population­s and causing them to collapse.

Gene drive technologi­es alter DNA and drive self-sustaining genetic changes through multiple generation­s by overriding normal biological processes.

The technique used in this study was designed to target the specific mosquito species Anopheles gambiae that is responsibl­e for malaria transmissi­on in sub-Saharan Africa.

The World Health Organizati­on has warned that global progress against malaria is stalling and could be reversed if momentum in the fight to wipe it out was lost.

The disease infected around 216 million people worldwide in 2016 and killed 445,000 of them. The vast majority of malaria deaths are in babies and young children in subSaharan Africa.

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