Genetically Modified Mosquitoes E. Justin Balido 16 March 2012

25

description

Genetically Modified Mosquitoes E. Justin Balido 16 March 2012. CURRENT MALARIA INTERVENTIONS. Indoor residual spraying Insecticide treated bed nets Larval controls . MOSQUITO RELEASE. Mosquitoes are bred to express certain traits These bred mosquitoes are released into the wild - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Genetically Modified Mosquitoes E. Justin Balido 16 March 2012

Page 1: Genetically Modified Mosquitoes E. Justin  Balido 16 March 2012
Page 2: Genetically Modified Mosquitoes E. Justin  Balido 16 March 2012

Genetically Modified Mosquitoes

E. Justin Balido16 March 2012

Page 3: Genetically Modified Mosquitoes E. Justin  Balido 16 March 2012

CURRENT MALARIA INTERVENTIONS

• Indoor residual spraying• Insecticide treated bed nets• Larval controls

Page 4: Genetically Modified Mosquitoes E. Justin  Balido 16 March 2012

MOSQUITO RELEASE

• Mosquitoes are bred to express certain traits• These bred mosquitoes are released into the wild• The released mosquitoes mate with wild mosquitoes• The next generation of wild mosquitoes is altered

Page 5: Genetically Modified Mosquitoes E. Justin  Balido 16 March 2012

GOALS OF GENETICALLY MODIFIED MOSQUITO INTERVENTIONS

• Reduction of malaria incidence– Population reduction– Population replacement

Page 6: Genetically Modified Mosquitoes E. Justin  Balido 16 March 2012

POPULATION REDUCTION

• Sterile Insect Technique– Irradiation– Chemosterilization– Cytoplasmic incompatibility – Trangenic sterilization

Page 7: Genetically Modified Mosquitoes E. Justin  Balido 16 March 2012

POPULATION REDUCTION

• Successes in Anopheles– El Salvador, Anopheles albimanus

• Chemosterilization

Page 8: Genetically Modified Mosquitoes E. Justin  Balido 16 March 2012

POPULATION REDUCTION

• Failures– El Salvador– WHO & Indian Council of Medical Research

Page 9: Genetically Modified Mosquitoes E. Justin  Balido 16 March 2012

TRANSGENIC STERILIZATION

• Introduction of genes that induce lethality in the offspring of mosquitoes

Page 10: Genetically Modified Mosquitoes E. Justin  Balido 16 March 2012

POPULATION REPLACEMENT

• Induce plasmodium resistance in anopheles mosquitoes

Page 11: Genetically Modified Mosquitoes E. Justin  Balido 16 March 2012

ANIMAL STUDIES

• Rodent– Proteins prevented

parasite from leaving the midgut

• Avian– Antibodies attack

parasite in hemolymph before entering salviary glands

Page 12: Genetically Modified Mosquitoes E. Justin  Balido 16 March 2012

• Marshall JM, Taylor CE (2009) Malaria Control with Transgenic Mosquitoes. PLoS. 2009; 6(2)

Page 13: Genetically Modified Mosquitoes E. Justin  Balido 16 March 2012

ENDOGENOUS PROMOTERS

• Genes inherent in mosquitoes that will promote the production of engineered proteins

Page 14: Genetically Modified Mosquitoes E. Justin  Balido 16 March 2012

ENDOGENOUS PROMOTERS

• Bloodmeal-triggered– Also utilizes genes already present in mosquito to

enhance immunity

Page 15: Genetically Modified Mosquitoes E. Justin  Balido 16 March 2012

DRIVE SYSTEMS

• Mechanisms that would help the exogenous gene spread through the population

Page 16: Genetically Modified Mosquitoes E. Justin  Balido 16 March 2012

DRIVE SYSTEMS

• Transposable Elements– Replicate within single host’s genome– Many obstacles

Page 17: Genetically Modified Mosquitoes E. Justin  Balido 16 March 2012

DRIVE SYSTEMS

• Medea– Offspring lethality

Page 18: Genetically Modified Mosquitoes E. Justin  Balido 16 March 2012

TRANSGENIC FUNGI

• Metarhizium anisopliae– Induce malaria resistance– Antibody production– Peptide production

Page 19: Genetically Modified Mosquitoes E. Justin  Balido 16 March 2012

FITNESS CONCERNS

• Study using plasmodium resistant, plasmodium susceptible, and control– Plasmodium resistant showed less population

growth– Fitness most dependent on larval survival and

gravid female survival• Plasmodium resistant performed lower than other

groups

Page 20: Genetically Modified Mosquitoes E. Justin  Balido 16 March 2012

ADVANTAGES

• Human compliance• Sustainability

Page 21: Genetically Modified Mosquitoes E. Justin  Balido 16 March 2012

DISADVANTAGES

• Ethical Concerns• Biosafety• Sustainability• Scale

Page 22: Genetically Modified Mosquitoes E. Justin  Balido 16 March 2012

ETHICS

• Religious issues• Consent

Page 23: Genetically Modified Mosquitoes E. Justin  Balido 16 March 2012

BIOSAFETY

• Cartagena Protocol– Precautionary Principle– Least harmful alternative

Page 24: Genetically Modified Mosquitoes E. Justin  Balido 16 March 2012

SUSTAINABILITY

• Gene drive success• Natural Selection• Mosquito Release Numbers

Page 25: Genetically Modified Mosquitoes E. Justin  Balido 16 March 2012

LOOKING TO THE FUTURE

• More research needs to be done• Each study has its own drawbacks and

advantages