Posted on 10/10/2005 7:49:03 AM PDT by cloud8
- Plan to breed and sterilise millions of male insects
- Leader says project almost ready for testing in wild
Genetically modified mosquitoes could soon be released into the wild in an attempt to combat malaria. Scientists at Imperial College London, who created the GM insects, say they could wipe out natural mosquito populations and save thousands of lives in malaria-stricken regions.
Led by Andrea Crisanti, the team added a gene that makes the testicles of the male mosquitoes fluorescent, allowing the scientists to distinguish and easily separate them from females. The plan is to breed, sterilise and release millions of these male insects so they mate with wild females but produce no offspring, eradicating insects in the target region within weeks.
Professor Crisanti said: "Our mosquitoes are nearly ready for testing in the wild. This is a technology that works and could make a real difference. The beauty is that it's very specific. Unlike insecticides, sterile males target only the species you want to attack."
Mosquitoes that spread malaria have long been a target for sterile male technology, which has been used to eradicate the screwworm fly from the US, Mexico and Central America.
The International Atomic Energy Agency has been using its radiation technology to support health projects, and wants to release sterile mosquitoes to tackle malaria in northern Sudan and on Reunion island in the Indian ocean - but they and other groups have been hampered by an inability to distinguish the males, which do not bite people. Female mosquitoes transmit malaria, even if sterile, so releasing them alongside males would make the situation worse.
Prof Crisanti said: "The really challenging problem is to identify the males. There is no difference between the larvae and as adults they fly, so the logistics of trying to separate them when they're adults is immense."
To solve the problem, his team altered the DNA of the mosquito species Anopheles stephensi, the principal carrier of malaria in Asia, so that the males expressed a fluorescent green protein in their sperm. A sorting machine based on laser light separated male from female larvae, according to whether they glowed or not. Writing in Nature Biotechnology today, the scientists say the machine could sort 180,000 larvae in 10 hours.
The next step is to scale up the technique to provide the millions of GM insects needed to make a large-scale release effective. The scientists also need to check the sterile males will be strong enough to compete with wild rivals when released - the strategy depends on female mosquitoes, who only mate once in their two-week lifespan, choosing sterile males.
Prof Crisanti said other mosquito species could be modified in the same way, including Anopheles gambiae, which is responsible for a large part of the 2.7m deaths caused by malaria each year. He is talking to international agencies about setting up a trial. Scientists have previously considered releasing both male and female mosquitoes that have been genetically modified in a different way, making them unable to transmit malaria. The idea is that altered insects would spread the disruptive genes through natural mosquito populations, but concerns about whether the inserted genes could transfer to other organisms have so far scuppered plans to set up large-scale breeding colonies to test it.
Prof Crisanti argued that, because the new GM mosquitoes are sterilised, releasing them into the environment does not pose significant risks: "It won't transmit any genes to the environment. This allows us to test the transgenic technology in a very safe way that overcomes the previous environmental and safety concerns." Releasing males only would ensure people were not bitten by GM mosquitoes, he added.
Sue Mayer of Genewatch agreed that the new GM insect did address some of the previous concerns, but she called for thorough testing of the mosquitoes before they were considered for release. "Changing one gene can sometimes affect others, so there are still questions to ask," she said.
There are political barriers too. The London group's insect is best suited to tackling malaria in impoverished urban areas of south-east Asia and India, where World Health Organisation trials of sterile male mosquitoes to fight dengue fever collapsed in the 1970s amid biowarfare accusations. The males of the mosquito involved in the Delhi trials could be separated because their pupae were smaller, but they were never released after newspaper articles claimed the experiment might secretly be used to gather data on how to spread yellow fever.
Chris Curtis, a malaria expert with the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine who worked on the WHO project in India, said: "We were all set to go and there was a huge uproar. You have to handle the public relations very carefully."
Female mosquitoes can travel several kilometres after mating, he said, so the sterile male technique is best suited to isolated insect populations, such as in cities. "If females that have already mated fly in from outside your release area then they carry on laying fertile eggs. That's fatal."
Footnotes
Malaria
The world's most common and deadly parasitic disease. It is spread from person to person when female mosquitoes feed on human blood. Infects up to 500 million people each year, and kills an estimated 2.7 million people.
Sterile male technology
Male insects can be sterilised using chemicals and radiation. If enough sterile males can be released to breed with females, the insect population of a target region can crash within weeks.
Fluorescent green protein
Originally identified in jellyfish that live in the cold waters of the north Pacific ocean. The protein glows green under ultraviolet light.
Large-scale release
Huge numbers of sterile males would have to be released, possibly several hundred thousand at different locations throughout a city in several waves over a month.
Yellow fever
The disease was absent from Asia but appeared on a US list of potential biowarfare agents. When an Indian journalist discovered the common name of the insect involved was "yellow fever mosquito" the trials were halted.
I will give a pass on viruses, some are good most are bad. However, when man has introduced a species into an environment they are not indiginous to for the purpose of controlling another species it doesn't have the desired affects after the targeted species is controlled. The introduced species then becomes a problem and the whole process starts again until one day we are the targeted species.
Controlling the wolf comes to mind. Eradicate wolf. Other species it preyed on populations explode. These species suffer overpopulation and competition for food. We re-intro the wolf and now it is eating not only deer/elk/others it is eating cattle and sheep as the wolf is flourishing. Now we talk again about controlling its population.
When man does not learn from history he is doomed to repeat it.
Man should stick to what he knows and trying to fool Mother Nature isn't one of them.
Introducing a new species is worrisome, even for a technophile like me, but they are not introducing a new species, but merely sterilized mosquitoes of the same species that is already there. Playing God? That's like saying you play God when you reach for the fly swatter..
Don't you think that being STERILE will hurt the long time viability of the GM males? I think the glowing balls is a secondary issue.
This is a one shot deal. They grow them in labs, they release them and then release more as necessary. The whole point is that they don't breed in the wild and introduce some other trait or upset the enviroment any more than we want it to.
Anything that gets released into the wild has to be self-limiting, not self-perpetuating.
They do not know what affect the process will have on the species. Good or bad they have a purpose ( I don't know what I hate them ) or God would not have made them. They also have no clue as to what happens in 2,20,50... years. They is always some other species in place to take the place of one that went away. We may not like the replacement.
Not going to happen.
The result would be more dark skinned people.
Liberals HATE dark skinnned people (See Great Society, Lyndon Johnson if you don't believe it), and will stop at nothing to prevent this from happening.
Since they are still in the drivers seat on this kind of stuff, it's going to remain a pipe dream.
I dropped a $100 dollar bill on the ground once in San Francisco.....
Lost it, I never would bendover to pick it up.....
NeverGore :^)
Is this a new ping list? :^)
Could be, except I'm not checking the requirements for membership.
GM mosquito... why to me does this seem like a bad idea?
Mark
I'm surprised no one has posted a picture of a glow in the dark condom package! If I knew of a host server that has stock pictures on it that I could link to, I would have.
Keep in mind they are not trying to get this species to survive, that would defeat the purpose. The point is to send out sterile males to breed to cut down on a local population
"I prefer "Glownads"
Beautiful!
I don't even want to know why you're paying a young guy $20.00 to bend over that requires you to hold onto his collar....
NeverGore :^)
thanks. I was rather proud of that one. It was like a little lightbulb went on over my head.
Waitaminute! That's not a lightbulb!!!?
So he can't get ahold of your collar!
This isn't getting any better for you.....LOL
NeverGore :^)
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