Litcius/Paper detail

Gene drives gaining speed

Ethan Bier

2021Nature Reviews Genetics240 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Gene drives are selfish genetic elements that are transmitted to progeny at super-Mendelian (>50%) frequencies. Recently developed CRISPR–Cas9-based gene-drive systems are highly efficient in laboratory settings, offering the potential to reduce the prevalence of vector-borne diseases, crop pests and non-native invasive species. However, concerns have been raised regarding the potential unintended impacts of gene-drive systems. This Review summarizes the phenomenal progress in this field, focusing on optimal design features for full-drive elements (drives with linked Cas9 and guide RNA components) that either suppress target mosquito populations or modify them to prevent pathogen transmission, allelic drives for updating genetic elements, mitigating strategies including trans-complementing split-drives and genetic neutralizing elements, and the adaptation of drive technology to other organisms. These scientific advances, combined with ethical and social considerations, will facilitate the transparent and responsible advancement of these technologies towards field implementation. In this Review, Ethan Bier discusses how several impactful technical advancements, particularly involving CRISPR-based methods, are providing a diverse toolkit of gene-drive systems for the control of populations such as insect vectors of disease.

Topics & Concepts

Gene driveBiologyCRISPRCas9Mendelian inheritanceComputational biologyAdaptation (eye)GeneGeneticsBiotechnologyRisk analysis (engineering)NeuroscienceBusinessCRISPR and Genetic EngineeringInsect symbiosis and bacterial influencesInsect Resistance and Genetics