Eliminating malaria vectors with precision-guided sterile males

Controlling the principal African malaria vector, the mosquito , is considered essential to curtail malaria transmission. However, existing vector control technologies rely on insecticides, which are becoming increasingly ineffective. Sterile insect technique (SIT) is a powerful suppression approach...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2024-07, Vol.121 (27), p.e2312456121
Hauptverfasser: Apte, Reema A, Smidler, Andrea L, Pai, James J, Chow, Martha L, Chen, Sanle, Mondal, Agastya, Sánchez C, Héctor M, Antoshechkin, Igor, Marshall, John M, Akbari, Omar S
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Controlling the principal African malaria vector, the mosquito , is considered essential to curtail malaria transmission. However, existing vector control technologies rely on insecticides, which are becoming increasingly ineffective. Sterile insect technique (SIT) is a powerful suppression approach that has successfully eradicated a number of insect pests, yet the toolkit lacks the requisite technologies for its implementation. SIT relies on iterative mass releases of nonbiting, nondriving, sterile males which seek out and mate with monandrous wild females. Once mated, females are permanently sterilized due to mating-induced refractoriness, which results in population suppression of the subsequent generation. However, sterilization by traditional methods renders males unfit, making the creation of precise genetic sterilization methods imperative. Here, we introduce a vector control technology termed precision-guided sterile insect technique (pgSIT), in for inducible, programmed male sterilization and female elimination for wide-scale use in SIT campaigns. Using a binary CRISPR strategy, we cross separate engineered Cas9 and gRNA strains to disrupt male-fertility and female-essential genes, yielding >99.5% male sterility and >99.9% female lethality in hybrid progeny. We demonstrate that these genetically sterilized males have good longevity, are able to induce sustained population suppression in cage trials, and are predicted to eliminate wild populations using mathematical models, making them ideal candidates for release. This work provides a valuable addition to the malaria genetic biocontrol toolkit, enabling scalable SIT-like confinable, species-specific, and safe suppression in the species.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.2312456121