Litcius/Paper detail

A male-biased sex-distorter gene drive for the human malaria vector Anopheles gambiae

Alekos Simoni, Andrew Hammond, Andrea Beaghton, Roberto Galizi, Chrysanthi Taxiarchi, Kyros Kyrou, Dario Meacci, Matthew O. Gribble, Giulia Morselli, Austin Burt, Tony Nolan, Andrea Crisanti

2020Nature Biotechnology254 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Only female insects transmit diseases such as malaria, dengue and Zika; therefore, control methods that bias the sex ratio of insect offspring have long been sought. Genetic elements such as sex-chromosome drives can distort sex ratios to produce unisex populations that eventually collapse, but the underlying molecular mechanisms are unknown. We report a male-biased sex-distorter gene drive (SDGD) in the human malaria vector Anopheles gambiae. We induced super-Mendelian inheritance of the X-chromosome-shredding I-PpoI nuclease by coupling this to a CRISPR-based gene drive inserted into a conserved sequence of the doublesex (dsx) gene. In modeling of invasion dynamics, SDGD was predicted to have a quicker impact on female mosquito populations than previously developed gene drives targeting female fertility. The SDGD at the dsx locus led to a male-only population from a 2.5% starting allelic frequency in 10-14 generations, with population collapse and no selection for resistance. Our results support the use of SDGD for malaria vector control.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyGene driveDoublesexAnopheles gambiaeGeneticsMalariaMeiotic driveMendelian inheritancePopulationGeneAnophelesAlleleCRISPRImmunologyDemographyRNA splicingSociologyRNAInsect symbiosis and bacterial influencesCRISPR and Genetic EngineeringMosquito-borne diseases and control