‘Mosquito birth control’ drug could be ready in five years

Published January 10, 2019
Developing drugs targeting protein could provide way to reduce mosquito populations without harming beneficial insects.
Developing drugs targeting protein could provide way to reduce mosquito populations without harming beneficial insects.

LONDON: Scientists in the United States said on Tuesday they had taken a major step towards developing a “mosquito birth control” drug to curb the spread of malaria and other killer diseases blamed for hundreds of thousands of deaths a year.

Researchers at the University of Arizona said they had discovered a protein unique to female mosquitoes which is critical for their young to hatch. When the scientists blocked the protein, the females laid eggs with defective shells causing the embryos inside to die.

The team said developing drugs which targetted the protein could provide a way to reduce mosquito populations without harming beneficial insects such as bees.

“It’s an important discovery,” Roger Miesfeld, head of the university’s department of chemistry and biochemistry, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone. “We’re certainly excited about it ... This gets around mosquito resistance and also has a much better chance of being bio-safe [than other methods].”

Mosquitoes are one of the world’s deadliest animals, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO) which has warned that global progress against malaria is stalling.

The disease infected around 216 million people in 2016, killing 445,000 of them, predominantly babies and young children in sub-Saharan Africa. Other diseases spread by mosquitoes include Zika, Chikungunya, yellow fever, West Nile virus and dengue, which has risen 30-fold in recent decades, according to the WHO.

Miesfeld said current methods of controlling mosquitoes had been used for so long that the insects were becoming resistant. He said the research team was surprised to find that treated females could no longer reproduce for the rest of their two- to three-week life span.

He added that he hoped the discovery could lead to the development of a new generation of insecticides in five years.

These could be applied to bed nets and other areas in the same way as current sprays and would be absorbed by the mosquito through her legs and body.

Published in Dawn, January 10th, 2019

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