4.6 Article

Making gene drive biodegradable

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2019.0804

Keywords

gene drive; mitigation strategy; self-elimination mechanism; mosquito; risk assessment; clustered regulatory interspaced palindromic repeat

Categories

Funding

  1. Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency under Texas A&M Agrilife Research [HR0011-16-2-0036]
  2. Texas A&M High-Performance Research Computing (HPRC) Centre

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Self-elimination mechanisms could be incorporated into homing-based gene drive transgenes to facilitate rigorous field-based testing and limit the presence of gene drive transgenes in nature. This approach allows for the removal of gene drive transgenes and the generation of transgene-free alleles resistant to gene drive action, providing a biodegradable solution for gene drive technology.
Gene drive systems have long been sought to modify mosquito populations and thus combat malaria and dengue. Powerful gene drive systems have been developed in laboratory experiments, but may never be used in practice unless they can be shown to be acceptable through rigorous field-based testing. Such testing is complicated by the anticipated difficulty in removing gene drive transgenes from nature. Here, we consider the inclusion of self-elimination mechanisms into the design of homing-based gene drive transgenes. This approach not only caused the excision of the gene drive transgene, but also generates a transgene-free allele resistant to further action by the gene drive. Strikingly, our models suggest that this mechanism, acting at a modest rate (10%) as part of a single-component system, would be sufficient to cause the rapid reversion of even the most robust homing-based gene drive transgenes, without the need for further remediation. Modelling also suggests that unlike gene drive transgenes themselves, self-eliminating transgene approaches are expected to tolerate substantial rates of failure. Thus, self-elimination technology may permit rigorous field-based testing of gene drives by establishing strict time limits on the existence of gene drive transgenes in nature, rendering them essentially biodegradable. This article is part of the theme issue 'Novel control strategies for mosquito-borne diseases'.

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