Genetically-engineered mosquitoes give hope against dengue

Genetically-engineered mosquitoes give hope against dengue
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In a first, researchers have genetically engineered mosquitoes that have an increased resistance to infection by the dengue virus.

New York: In a first, researchers have genetically engineered mosquitoes that have an increased resistance to infection by the dengue virus.

After decades of research and countless control attempts, dengue continues to infect an estimated 390 million people around the world each year.

Now, researchers report that mosquitoes carrying dengue virus (DENV) can be genetically engineered, giving an increased resistance to infection by the virus.

When a mosquito bites someone infected with DENV, the virus needs to complete its lifecycle in the mosquito's gut, eventually infecting its salivary glands, before it can infect another person.

Previous studies have shown that mosquitoes rely on a molecular pathway to fight DENV infection and stop this cycle.

Proteins known as Dome and Hop are involved in turning on the pathway when the mosquito is infected with DENV.

In the new work, George Dimopoulos from Johns Hopkins University and colleagues genetically engineered Aedes aegypti mosquitoes to turn on expression of either Dome or Hop in the fatbody tissue.

Mosquitoes with engineered versions of Dome or Hop that were then infected with DENV had 78.18 per cent (Dome) and 83.63 per cent (Hop) fewer copies of the virus in their guts, as well as significantly less virus in their salivary glands.

Mosquitoes with the altered genes had normal lifespans, but produced fewer eggs than normal mosquitoes.

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