Modelling sterile insect technique to control the population of Anopheles gambiae
Authored by James E Gentile, Samuel S C Rund, Gregory R Madey
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1186/s12936-015-0587-5
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Abstract
Background: There is a renewed effort to develop novel malaria control
strategies as even well-implemented existing malaria control tools may
fail to block transmission in some regions. Currently, transgenic
implementations of the sterile insect technique (SIT) such as the
release of insects with a dominant lethal, homing endonuclease genes, or
flightless mosquitoes are in development. These implementations involve
the release of transgenic male mosquitoes whose matings with wild
females produce either no viable offspring or no female offspring. As
these technologies are all in their infancy, little is known about the
relative efficiencies of the various implementations.
Methods: This paper describes agent-based modelling of emerging and
theoretical implementations of transgenic SIT in Anopheles gambiae for
the control of malaria. It reports on female suppression as it is
affected by the SIT implementation, the number of released males, and
competitiveness of released males.
Conclusions: The simulation experiments suggest that a late-acting bisex
lethal gene is the most efficient of the four implementations we
simulated. They demonstrate 1) the relative impact of release size on a
campaign's effectiveness 2) late-acting genes are preferred because of
their ability to exploit density dependent larval mortality 3)
late-acting bisex lethal genes achieve elimination before their
female-killing counterparts.
Tags
Dynamics
Engineered male mosquitos
Lethal genetic system
Aedes-aegypti
Release
program
Malaria control
Multiple loci
Pest-control
Males
Eradication