The Guardian (Nigeria)

Scientists one step closer to wiping out malaria

• Eradicate disease- transmitti­ng mosquitos using genetic engineerin­g which make females infertile in new study

- Compiled by Chukwuma Muanya

SCIENTISTS have successful­ly wiped out a population of malaria- transmitti­ng mosquitoes by using a radical form of genetic engineerin­g to render the females infertile – in the most advanced and largest ever use of the technology to fight the disease.

As well as bringing fresh hope in the fight against one of the world’s biggest killers, the study lays the foundation for further trials of gene- drive technology, which could mean self- destroying mosquitoes being released into the wild within 10 years.

Malaria kills nearly 500,000 people globally every year, but scientists have now figured out a way to use CRISPR geneeditin­g technology to make female mosquitoes infertile, described as a ‘ game- changer’ for ending the deadly disease.

Researcher­s from Imperial College London, Genomics Genetics and Biology, and the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine were able to use a gene drive for the first time to not only show that blocking female reproducti­on worked in a lab setting, but naturallik­e setting as well.

The findings were published earlier this week in Nature Communicat­ions.

The researcher­s targeted the mosquito species Anopheles gambiae, which is responsibl­e for the majority of malaria transmissi­ons in sub- Saharan Africa.

The gene- drives target the gene known as ‘ doublesex’ in these mosquitoes.

In the new study, in the realworld setting, there was a “complete population suppressio­n within 560 days,’ with 95 percent of the simulation­s reaching a state of no more offspring in 399 and 329 days ‘ for the low and high gene- drive frequency releases, respective­ly.”

During a previous study conducted in 2018, the researcher­s put nearly 600 mosquitoes into a small cage and once the gene drive was used, no more offspring were produced within seven to 11 generation­s.

“The challenges facing malaria eliminatio­n have intensifie­d in recent years, due in part to the spread of insecticid­e resistance and large gaps in funding for parts of sub- Saharan Africa,” said the study’s coauthor, Imperial College London and Johns Hopkins Malaria Research Institute scientist, Dr. Drew Hammond, in a statement.

“Sadly, researcher­s estimate that COVID- 19 related disruption­s may have doubled mortality from malaria in 2020, threatenin­g a setback of several decades.

“Gene drive is a self- sustaining and fast acting technology that can work alongside existing tools such as bed nets, insecticid­es and vaccines – and could be a game- changer in bringing about malaria eliminatio­n.”

In an interview with The Guardian, Hammond said gene drive technology “could be a game- changer in bringing about malaria eliminatio­n.”

Although there are more than 3,500 mosquito species around the world, only a small fraction of them carry malaria.

In 2019, there were 229 million cases of malaria and 409,000 deaths, with children under 5 the most vulnerable, according to the World Health Organisati­on.

Last month, the WHO declared China malaria- free, after it successful­ly implemente­d its 1- 3- 7 strategy. In the 1940s, China routinely reported 30 million cases annually.

The researcher­s hope that a mosquito with the gene drive could be released in the future, and eventually spread the tweak to female mosquitoes and lead to infertilit­y of the species.

“The gene- drive element spreads rapidly through the population­s, fully suppresses the population within one year and without selecting for resistance to the gene drive,” the researcher­s wrote in the study’s abstract.

The new cages were designed to produce “complex mating and ovi-position behaviours” such as egg laying that were not available in the previous small cages.

The temperatur­e and the humidity inside the cage were controlled and the researcher­s put natural landmarks and specialize­d lighting designed to simulate sunrise and sunset to induce swarming.

Each of the large cages showed “a rapid spread of the gene drive and complete population collapse within one year,” the statement added.

There is concern over gene drives, as mutations can become resistant to technology, but the experts said this strain is the first and only one that did not show any signs of resistance.

“Our large- cage studies provide a greater selection pressure for resistance to the gene drive to arise, as there may be additional ‘ fitness costs’ when the mosquitoes exhibit natural mating and egg- laying behaviors that are impacted in ways we couldn’t predict from small- cage studies,” co- lead authors of the study, Dr. Tania Persampier­i and Paola Pollegioni, said.

“However, no modificati­ons arose that could render the mosquito doublesex gene resistant to our gene drive, suggesting our modificati­on driving female infertilit­y is robust.”

 ??  ?? The world's biggest killers are in fact something so tiny - the mosquito. Worldwide there are 3,500 known species of mosquito. Which are the deadliest and which should be avoided at all costs? CREDIT: https:// www. dw. com/ en/ the- mosquito- the- worlds- smallest- biggest- killer/ a- 19017493
The world's biggest killers are in fact something so tiny - the mosquito. Worldwide there are 3,500 known species of mosquito. Which are the deadliest and which should be avoided at all costs? CREDIT: https:// www. dw. com/ en/ the- mosquito- the- worlds- smallest- biggest- killer/ a- 19017493

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