Abstract

Presently, the principal tools to combat malaria are restricted to killing the parasite in infected people and killing the mosquito vector to thwart transmission. While successful, these approaches are losing effectiveness in view of parasite resistance to drugs and mosquito resistance to insecticides. Clearly, new approaches to fight this deadly disease need to be developed. Recently, one such approach–engineering mosquito resident bacteria to secrete anti-parasite compounds–has proven in the laboratory to be highly effective. However, implementation of this strategy requires approval from regulators as it involves introduction of recombinant bacteria into the field. A frequent argument by regulators is that if something unexpectedly goes wrong after release, there must be a recall mechanism. This report addresses this concern. Previously we have shown that a Serratia bacterium isolated from a mosquito ovary is able to spread through mosquito populations and is amenable to be engineered to secrete anti-plasmodial compounds. We have introduced a plasmid into this bacterium that carries a fluorescent protein gene and show that when cultured in the laboratory, the plasmid is completely lost in about 130 bacterial generations. Importantly, when these bacteria were introduced into mosquitoes, the bacteria were transmitted from one generation to the next, but the plasmid was lost after three mosquito generations, rendering the bacteria non-recombinant (wild type). Furthermore, no evidence was obtained for horizontal transfer of the plasmid to other bacteria either in culture or in the mosquito. Prior to release, it is imperative to demonstrate that the genes that thwart parasite development in the mosquito are safe to the environment. This report describes a methodology to safely achieve this goal, utilizing transient expression from a plasmid that is gradually lost, returning the bacterium to wild type status.

Highlights

  • While global malaria cases and deaths declined dramatically over the past decades, malaria incidence since 2014 has remained at similar levels [1]

  • The engineered symbiotic bacterium Serratia AS1 was shown in the laboratory to be able to spread through mosquito populations and render mosquitoes resistant to the parasite

  • We show that horizontal transfer of the plasmid from Serratia AS1 to other bacteria is extremely rare, as this was undetectable in the mosquito and in culture

Read more

Summary

Introduction

While global malaria cases and deaths declined dramatically over the past decades, malaria incidence since 2014 has remained at similar levels [1]. We have shown that the Serratia AS1 bacterium strain isolated from Anopheles ovaries, can spread into mosquito populations and that this bacterium can be engineered to express anti-parasite genes [3]. Mosquitoes that carry these bacteria are largely refractory to the parasite. A major concern of regulators is that there should be an option for “recall” in case something goes wrong.

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.