Tuesday, June 2, 2026
ADVT 
Health

Malaria-proof Mosquito? Tool Promising But Needs More Study

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Jun, 2016 12:02 PM
    WASHINGTON — A powerful new technology holds the promise of rapidly altering genes to make malaria-proof mosquitoes, eliminate their Zika-carrying cousins or wipe out an invasive species.
     
    It's like hijacking evolution, a way to spread genetic change through insects, animals or plants faster than nature can, but a report Wednesday says these "gene drives" aren't ready to let loose in the wild just yet.
     
    Advisers to the government say lots more research is needed to learn to safely use gene drives and understand their social consequences. The public also needs a say in how this hot tool eventually is used, stressed the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine.
     
    It's on the horizon, and disease-carrying mosquitoes may be the first target. Already, a California lab has hatched mosquitoes incapable of transmitting malaria.
     
    Researchers say it shouldn't be too hard to tweak the technique to eliminate populations of another kind of mosquito — the one that spreads the Zika virus and dengue fever — by engineering those insects to become sterile.
     
    "The gene drive approach could offer a safer, less expensive and more lasting solution" to a number of public health and environmental problems, said National Academies' committee member Jason Delborne, an associate professor of science, policy and society at North Carolina State University.
     
    But no one knows how rapidly changing or even eliminating entire populations could affect habitats. For example, wipe out an invasive species, and could something even worse fill that empty niche?
     
    Moreover, once in the environment, gene drives would spread in the environment with no regard for national borders, the panel warned. It called for international scientific and regulatory collaboration.
     
     
     
    The National Institutes of Health, which requested the report, welcomed the findings.
     
    "This approach to potential irreversible modification of the genome of an entire species is breathtaking," said Dr. Francis Collins, NIH's director and a geneticist. But, he added, supporting research while holding off the release of gene drives into the environment "seems to strike the right balance, given both the exciting potential of this technology and uncertainty about its ecological impact."
     
    Normally, genes have a 50-50 chance of being inherited. Gene drives bias that inheritance, allowing scientists to genetically modify an organism and then ensure it spreads the new trait to virtually all its offspring, so entire populations can be affected in only a few generations.
     
    Scientists have long known this occasionally happens in nature as some species inherit certain genes at higher-than-expected rates. For half a century, they've tried to harness that biological power. But recently, that research has surged thanks to a gene-editing technique named CRISPR that allows precise editing of DNA in living cells.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    True happiness lies in your DNA

    True happiness lies in your DNA
    Looking for eternal happiness? Try to match the DNA of Danish people.

    True happiness lies in your DNA

    Statins may increase life of diabetics: Study

    Statins may increase life of diabetics: Study
    The use of cholesterol-lowering statins may help prolong the lives of people with diabetic cardiovascular disease, says a new research.

    Statins may increase life of diabetics: Study

    Influenza patients in US wrongly prescribed antibiotics?

    Influenza patients in US wrongly prescribed antibiotics?
    Taking antibiotics does not help patients suffering from influenza, a viral disease, but nearly 30 percent of the flu patients who were treated during the 2012-2013 influenza season in the US may have been prescribed unnecessary antibiotics instead of antiviral therapy, says a study.

    Influenza patients in US wrongly prescribed antibiotics?

    Food strikes obese women with learning impairment

    Food strikes obese women with learning impairment
    In what could result in specific behavioural interventions to treat obesity, researchers have found that obese women are better able to identify cues that predict monetary rewards than those that predict food rewards.

    Food strikes obese women with learning impairment

    Injection to control diabetes without side effects

    Injection to control diabetes without side effects
    Dealing with diabetes could soon be a lot easier as researchers have developed an injection that can restore blood sugar levels to normal for more than two days without any side effects.

    Injection to control diabetes without side effects

    'Include men in breast cancer trials'

    'Include men in breast cancer trials'
    Men may find it hard to report anything in their breast, even if it is a lump, but the fact is breast cancer is not exclusive to women and though the proportion is small, men too can have it.

    'Include men in breast cancer trials'