生物
冈比亚按蚊
基因驱动
遗传学
疟疾
内切酶
Y染色体
沃尔巴克氏菌
按蚊
基因
进化生物学
计算生物学
清脆的
核酸内切酶
免疫学
作者
Roberto Galizi,Lindsey Doyle,Miriam Menichelli,Federica Bernardini,Anne Dérédec,Austin Burt,Barry Stoddard,Nikolai Windbichler,Andrea Crisanti
摘要
It has been theorized that inducing extreme reproductive sex ratios could be a method to suppress or eliminate pest populations. Limited knowledge about the genetic makeup and mode of action of naturally occurring sex distorters and the prevalence of co-evolving suppressors has hampered their use for control. Here we generate a synthetic sex distortion system by exploiting the specificity of the homing endonuclease I-PpoI, which is able to selectively cleave ribosomal gene sequences of the malaria vector Anopheles gambiae that are located exclusively on the mosquito's X chromosome. We combine structure-based protein engineering and molecular genetics to restrict the activity of the potentially toxic endonuclease to spermatogenesis. Shredding of the paternal X chromosome prevents it from being transmitted to the next generation, resulting in fully fertile mosquito strains that produce >95% male offspring. We demonstrate that distorter male mosquitoes can efficiently suppress caged wild-type mosquito populations, providing the foundation for a new class of genetic vector control strategies. Extreme reproductive sex ratios could result in the suppression or elimination of pest populations. Here, the authors design a synthetic sex distortion system in Anopheles gambiaethat gives rise to fertile mosquito strains that produce over 95% male offsprings and could therefore be used to suppress mosquito populations.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI