Malaria Proof Mosquito Developed

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Gil Hamilton
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Malaria Proof Mosquito Developed

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The First Malaria-Proof Mosquito
UA scientists have achieved a breakthrough in the fight against malaria: a mosquito that can no longer give the disease to humans.
By Daniel Stolte, University Communications July 15, 2010

For years, researchers worldwide have attempted to create genetically altered mosquitoes that cannot infect humans with malaria. Those efforts fell short because the mosquitoes still were capable of transmitting the disease-causing pathogen, only in lower numbers.

Now for the first time, University of Arizona entomologists have succeeded in genetically altering mosquitoes in a way that renders them completely immune to the parasite, a single-celled organism called Plasmodium. Someday researchers hope to replace wild mosquitoes with lab-bred
populations unable to act as vectors, i.e. transmit the malaria-causing parasite.

"If you want to effectively stop the spreading of the malaria parasite, you need mosquitoes that are no less than 100 percent resistant to it. If a single parasite slips through and infects a human, the whole approach will be doomed to fail," said Michael Riehle, who led the research effort, the results of which were published July 15 in the journal Public Library of Science Pathogens.

Riehle is a professor of entomology in UA's College of Agriculture and Life Sciences and is a member of the BIO5 Institute.

Riehle's team used molecular biology techniques to design a piece of genetic information capable of inserting itself into a mosquito's genome. This construct was then injected into the eggs of the mosquitoes. The emerging generation carries the altered genetic information and passes it on to future generations.

For their experiments, the scientists used Anopheles stephensi, a mosquito species that is an important malaria vector throughout the Indian subcontinent.

The researchers targeted one of the many biochemical pathways inside the mosquito's cells. Specifically, they engineered a piece of genetic code acting as a molecular switch in the complex control of metabolic functions inside the cell. The genetic construct acts like a switch that is always set to "on," leading to the permanent activity of a signaling enzyme called Akt. Akt functions as a messenger molecule in several metabolic functions, including larval development, immune response and lifespan.

When Riehle and his co-workers studied the genetically modified mosquitoes after feeding them malaria-infested blood, they noticed that the Plasmodium parasites did not infect a single study animal.

"We were surprised how well this works," said Riehle. "We were just hoping to see some effect on the mosquitoes' growth rate, lifespan or their susceptibility to the parasite, but it was great to see that our construct blocked the infection process completely."

Of the estimated 250 million people who contract malaria each year, 1 million – mostly children – do not survive. Ninety percent of the number of fatalities, which Riehle suspects to be underreported, occur in sub-Saharan Africa.

Each new malaria case starts with a bite from a vector – a mosquito belonging to the genus Anopheles. About 25 species of Anopheles are significant vectors of the disease.

Only the female Anopheles mosquitoes feed on blood, which they need to produce eggs. When they bite an infected human or animal, they ingest the malaria parasite.

Once the Plasmodium cells find themselves in the insect's midgut, they spring into action. They leave the insect's digestive tract by squeezing through the midgut lining. The vast majority of Plasmodium cells do not survive this journey and are eliminated by the mosquito's immune cells. A tiny fraction of parasite cells, usually not more than a handful, make it and attach themselves on the outside of the midgut wall where they develop into brooding cells called oocysts.

Within 10-12 days, thousands of new Plasmodium cells, so-called sporozoites, sprout inside the oocyst. After hatching from the oocyst, the sporozoites make their way into the insect's salivary glands where they lie in wait until the mosquito finds a victim for a blood meal. When the mosquito bites, some sporozoites are flushed into the victim's bloodstream.

"The average mosquito transmits about 40 sporozoites when it bites," said Riehle, "but it takes only one to infect a human and make a new malaria victim."

Several species of Plasmodium exist in different parts of the world, all of which are microscopically small single-celled organisms that live in their host's red blood cells. Each time the parasites undergo a round of multiplication, their host cells burst and release the progeny into the bloodstream, causing the painful bouts of fever that malaria is known and feared for.

Malaria killed more soldiers in the Civil War than the fighting, according to Riehle. In fact, malaria was prevalent in most parts of the U.S. until the late 1940s and early 1950, when DDT spraying campaigns wiped the vectors off the map. Today, a new case of malaria occurs in the U.S. only on rare occasions.

The severity of the disease depends very largely on the species of the Plasmodium parasite the patient happens to contract.

"Only two species of Plasmodium cause the dreaded relapses of the disease," said Riehle. "One of them, Plasmodium vivax, can lie dormant in the liver for 10 to 15 years, but now drugs have become available that target the parasites in the liver as well as those in the blood cells."

That said, there are no effective or approved malaria vaccines. A few vaccine candidates have gone to clinical trials but they were shown to either be ineffective or provide only short-term protection. If an effective vaccine were to be developed, distribution would be a major problem, Riehle said.

Researchers and health officials put higher hopes into eradication programs, which aim at the disease-transmitting mosquitoes rather than the pathogens that cause it.

"The question is 'What can we do to turn a good vector into a bad vector?'" Riehle said.

"The eradication scenario requires three things: A gene that disrupts the development of the parasite inside the mosquito, a genetic technique to bring that gene into the mosquito genome and a mechanism that gives the modified mosquito an edge over the natural populations so they can displace them over time."

"The third requirement is going to be the most difficult of the three to realize," he added, which is why his team decided to tackle the other two first.

"It was known that the Akt enzyme is involved in the mosquito's growth rate and immune response, among other things," Riehle said. "So we went ahead with this genetic construct to see if we can ramp up Akt function and help the insects' immune system fight off the malaria parasite."

The second rationale behind this approach was to use Akt signaling to stunt the mosquitoes' growth and cut down on its lifespan.

"In the wild, a mosquito lives for an average of two weeks," Riehle explained. "Only the oldest mosquitoes are able to transmit the parasite. If we can reduce the lifespan of the mosquitoes, we can reduce the number of infections."

His research team discovered that mosquitoes carrying two copies of the altered gene had lost their ability to act as malaria vectors altogether.

"In that group of mosquitoes, not a single Plasmodium oocyst managed to form."

At this point, the modified mosquitoes exist in a highly secured lab environment with no chance of escape. Once researchers find a way to replace wild mosquito populations with lab-bred ones, breakthroughs like the one achieved by Riehle's group could pave the way toward a world in which malaria is all but history.

This study was funded by the National Institutes of Health.
http://uanews.org/node/32833

This is pretty cool stuff. If you can't cure people of malaria, cure the mosqutio. :D It would be really awesome if we could give these guys a significant advantage over the wild type such that they'd displace malarial mosquito populations. That could save many millions of lives in the future.
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Re: Malaria Proof Mosquito Developed

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It would save lives, yes. However I am still of the opinion "Kill them all". :lol:

The real question would be getting the lab-bred mosquitos to replace the natural ones. Effective methods of killing mosquitos still don't get them all, so there would still be a breeding population about. If the lab-bred and the natural moquitos interbreed, what would be the result? Which set of genes would be dominate?
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Gil Hamilton
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Re: Malaria Proof Mosquito Developed

Post by Gil Hamilton »

LadyTevar wrote:It would save lives, yes. However I am still of the opinion "Kill them all". :lol:

The real question would be getting the lab-bred mosquitos to replace the natural ones. Effective methods of killing mosquitos still don't get them all, so there would still be a breeding population about. If the lab-bred and the natural moquitos interbreed, what would be the result? Which set of genes would be dominate?
"Kill them all!" worked in the United States (DDT is pretty badass when it comes to insect mass murder... shame it does the same to fish and birds), but I understand there is still alot of issues with it in places like India or Africa. It sure would be nice if we could release a few crates of these guys and have them displace the local population.

As for what happens when you breed them with wild types, I don't know. I'm certain that the lab knows the answer or is investigating. I work here, so I might be able to shoot off an email or walk over there and ask. It depends on if this is an 80s horror movie or not, since the obvious answer is that it results in a five foot long race of super-mosquitos and will have John Goodman yelling "DAMN BLOODSUCKERS!" at some point.
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Re: Malaria Proof Mosquito Developed

Post by Hawkwings »

I see a short term/long term combo here. Use the Mosquito Laser for instant control, and this for long-term elimination. Would be even better if the laser could identify and not zap the mosquitos that are immune.
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Re: Malaria Proof Mosquito Developed

Post by LaCroix »

Can't they also modify the females to not need blood for reproduction, anymore, while they're at it?

But a good idea, depends on how many they release, and how dominant the gene is, they might help.
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Hawkwings
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Re: Malaria Proof Mosquito Developed

Post by Hawkwings »

mmm... if the females didn't need blood for reproduction, expect even bigger swarms of mosquitos in your future. Sure they might not bite, but they're still annoying.
Vendetta wrote:Richard Gatling was a pioneer in US national healthcare. On discovering that most soldiers during the American Civil War were dying of disease rather than gunshots, he turned his mind to, rather than providing better sanitary conditions and medical care for troops, creating a machine to make sure they got shot faster.
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Re: Malaria Proof Mosquito Developed

Post by LaCroix »

Why? If they go for nectar like the males, they won't swarm you. The only reason they are annoying is that they seek you out. There are thousands of other insects flying around for each mosquito, but you don't notice them because they are not trying to bite you...
A minute's thought suggests that the very idea of this is stupid. A more detailed examination raises the possibility that it might be an answer to the question "how could the Germans win the war after the US gets involved?" - Captain Seafort, in a thread proposing a 1942 'D-Day' in Quiberon Bay

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Re: Malaria Proof Mosquito Developed

Post by Admiral Valdemar »

LaCroix wrote:Can't they also modify the females to not need blood for reproduction, anymore, while they're at it?

But a good idea, depends on how many they release, and how dominant the gene is, they might help.
Homing endonuclease genes have been considered as a way of basically making the whole species infertile and unable to propagate and so nip the disease in the bud. However, it's fairly contentious as a technology and probably half as easy to implement.
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Re: Malaria Proof Mosquito Developed

Post by Bedlam »

LaCroix wrote:Can't they also modify the females to not need blood for reproduction, anymore, while they're at it?

But a good idea, depends on how many they release, and how dominant the gene is, they might help.
That would be a rather significant change to the biology of the species and probably beyond whats currently possible even if it was managed it would probably not be evolutionarily favourable, the high protein content of the blood meals allow the females to produce alot of eggs which develop quite quickly. Any modified females which only feed on nectar would probably produce less eggs which would take longer to develope and thus probably be out competed by blood feeding females quite quickly.
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