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A CRISPR-Cas9 gene drive system targeting female reproduction in the malaria mosquito vector Anopheles gambiae

Hammond, Andrew; Galizi, Roberto; Kyrou, Kyros; Simoni, Alekos; Siniscalchi, Carla; Katsanos, Dimitris; Gribble, Matthew; Baker, Dean; Marois, Eric; Russell, Steven; Burt, Austin; Windbichler, Nikolai; Crisanti, Andrea; Nolan, Tony

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Authors

Andrew Hammond

Kyros Kyrou

Alekos Simoni

Carla Siniscalchi

Dimitris Katsanos

Matthew Gribble

Dean Baker

Eric Marois

Steven Russell

Austin Burt

Nikolai Windbichler

Andrea Crisanti

Tony Nolan



Abstract

Gene drive systems that enable super-Mendelian inheritance of a transgene have the potential to modify insect populations over a timeframe of a few years. We describe CRISPR-Cas9 endonuclease constructs that function as gene drive systems in Anopheles gambiae, the main vector for malaria. We identified three genes (AGAP005958, AGAP011377 and AGAP007280) that confer a recessive female-sterility phenotype upon disruption, and inserted into each locus CRISPR-Cas9 gene drive constructs designed to target and edit each gene. For each targeted locus we observed a strong gene drive at the molecular level, with transmission rates to progeny of 91.4 to 99.6%. Population modeling and cage experiments indicate that a CRISPR-Cas9 construct targeting one of these loci, AGAP007280, meets the minimum requirement for a gene drive targeting female reproduction in an insect population. These findings could expedite the development of gene drives to suppress mosquito populations to levels that do not support malaria transmission.

Citation

Hammond, A., Galizi, R., Kyrou, K., Simoni, A., Siniscalchi, C., Katsanos, D., …Nolan, T. (2016). A CRISPR-Cas9 gene drive system targeting female reproduction in the malaria mosquito vector Anopheles gambiae. Nature Biotechnology, 78 - 83. https://doi.org/10.1038/nbt.3439

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Nov 23, 2016
Publication Date Jan 1, 2016
Publicly Available Date May 26, 2023
Journal Nature Biotechnology
Print ISSN 1087-0156
Publisher Nature Publishing Group
Pages 78 - 83
DOI https://doi.org/10.1038/nbt.3439
Keywords CRISPR-Cas9, genome, editing, entomology, malaria, reproductive biology
Publisher URL https://www.nature.com/articles/nbt.3439

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