Dodging silver bullets: good CRISPR gene-drive design is critical for eradicating exotic vertebrates
Authored by Joshua V Ross, Phillip Cassey, Thomas A A Prowse, Chandran Pfitzner, Talia A Wittmann, Paul Thomas
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2017.0799
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
R
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
https://datadryad.org/resource/doi:10.5061/dryad.t78gv
Abstract
Self-replicating gene drives that can spread deleterious alleles through
animal populations have been promoted as a much needed but controversial
`silver bullet' for controlling invasive alien species. Homing-based
drives comprise an endonuclease and a guide RNA (gRNA) that are
replicated during meiosis via homologous recombination. However, their
efficacy for controlling wild populations is threatened by inherent
polymorphic resistance and the creation of resistance alleles via
non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ)-mediated DNA repair. We used
stochastic individual-based models to identify realistic gene-drive
strategies capable of eradicating vertebrate pest populations (mice,
rats and rabbits) on islands. One popular strategy, a sex-reversing
drive that converts heterozygous females into sterile males, failed to
spread and required the ongoing deployment of gene-drive carriers to
achieve eradication. Under alternative strategies, multiplexed gRNAs
could overcome inherent polymorphic resistance and were required for
eradication success even when the probability of NHEJ was low.
Strategies causing homozygotic embryonic non-viability or homozygotic
female sterility produced high probabilities of eradication and were
robust to NHEJ-mediated deletion of the DNA sequence between multiplexed
endonuclease recognition sites. The latter two strategies also purged
the gene drive when eradication failed, therefore posing lower long-term
risk should animals escape beyond target islands. Multiplexing gRNAs
will be necessary if this technology is to be useful for insular
extirpation attempts; however, precise knowledge of homing rates will be
required to design low-risk gene drives with high probabilities of
eradication success.
Tags
Conservation
Mice
Generation
Reproduction
Vector
Natural-populations
Islands
Y-chromosome
Gene drive
Homing
Non-homologous end joining
Resistance allele
Population eradication
Island conservation
Mutagenic chain-reaction
Invasive
predators