Audio By Carbonatix
A malaria-free mosquito has been created by scientists using a genetic technology that causes the disease-free trait to be inherited by virtually all its offspring – raising the possibility of eradicating malaria within a single breeding season.
The genetically-engineered mosquito is incapable of transmitting malaria to humans and can pass on its disease immunity to 99.5 per cent of its progeny, according to a study.
The mosquito carries extra genes for antibodies that block the development of the malaria parasite within the insect and so prevent the disease from being transmitted to people when mosquitoes feed on human blood.
Laboratory experiments have demonstrated a method of amplifying the inheritance of the antibody gene that causes the malaria immunity so that virtually all subsequent generations of mosquito are equally incapable of transmitting the disease to human hosts.
Globally, malaria kills up to a million people each year, mostly children. Between 300 million and 500 million cases of malaria occur annually and an estimated 40 per cent of the world’s population live in malaria areas.
The study suggests that it may soon be possible to eradicate malaria from entire regions of the world by releasing genetically modified mosquitoes that are able to pass on their malaria “immunity” to the rest of the breeding population of mosquitoes.
However, scientists and environmental campaigners have warned that releasing GM mosquitoes equipped with powerful “gene drives” that amplify the frequency of synthetic genes within a natural population of breeding insects poses the risks of “unintended consequences” if safety concerns are not addressed.
Previous experiments on fruit flies have shown that gene drives can caused the rapid spread of genes within a breeding population of captive flying insects. Now scientists have demonstrated that gene drives combined with a powerful gene-editing technique called Crispr/Cas9 can cause the rapid spread of genes for malaria resistance in a laboratory population of the Anopheles stephensi mosquito, one of the principal carriers of malaria in Asia.
“This opens up the real promise that this technique can be adapted for eliminating malaria,” said Professor Anthony James of the University of California, Irvine, who led the study published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Professor James developed the anti-malaria antibodies from work on laboratory mice. He collaborated with Valentino Gantz and Ethan Bier of the UC San Diego, who have pioneered the development of gene-drive technology using Crispr/Cas9 on fruit flies.
Latest Stories
-
Africa Aquatics Championships: Yase Eshun represents Ghana as sole international technical official
3 minutes -
Team spirit, preparation fuel Nigeria’s historic sprint relay qualification
1 hour -
The void that can’t be refilled: A Mother’s Day for the missing, the remembered and the unseen
2 hours -
Gillian Darko: The Quiet Strategy Shaping Africa’s Fintech Future
3 hours -
Dr Mohammed Amin Adam made co-chair of NPP Finance and Economy Committee
3 hours -
Akosua Manu appointed spokesperson for NPP’s Gender and Social Protection Committee
3 hours -
2026 Mini GUSA Track and Field Athletics: Day One in Pictures
3 hours -
Gulf of Guinea security demands collective action – Defence Ministry
4 hours -
African Armwrestling Championships: Accra Mayor promises jobs for 30 Ghanaian athletes after medal haul
5 hours -
Starmer under pressure, as Labour suffers heavy election losses
5 hours -
Wife allegedly butchers husband in deadly fight over charcoal money
6 hours -
Anger and resignation in Tenerife as hantavirus ship approaches
6 hours -
‘This nonsense must stop’ – UGBS Dean Prof. Bawole slams exploitation of BECE leavers for social media content
7 hours -
Asamoah Gyan fears for Black Stars as Kudus’ injury rocks World Cup plans
8 hours -
Ofori Panin school nurse killed in solo motorcycle crash
8 hours