Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Boëte Christophe, Agusto F.B., Reeves R.G. (2014). Impact of mating behaviour on the success of malaria control through a single inundative release of transgenic mosquitoes. Journal of Theoretical Biology, 347, p. 33-43. ISSN 0022-5193.

Titre du document
Impact of mating behaviour on the success of malaria control through a single inundative release of transgenic mosquitoes
Année de publication
2014
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000334977300004
Auteurs
Boëte Christophe, Agusto F.B., Reeves R.G.
Source
Journal of Theoretical Biology, 2014, 347, p. 33-43 ISSN 0022-5193
Transgenic mosquitoes are a potential tool for the control or eradication of insect-vectored diseases. For malaria, one possible strategy relies on the introduction of malaria-refractory transgenes into wild Anopheles mosquito populations that would limit their capacity to transmit the disease. The success of such an approach obviously depends on a variety of factors. By developing a model that integrates both population genetics and epidemiology, we explore how mosquito mating preferences and the cost and efficacy ofrefractoriness affects the long-term prevalence of malaria in humans subsequent to a single generation inundative release of male transgenic mosquitoes. As may be intuitively expected, mating discrimination by wild-type individuals against transgenic ones generally reduces the probability that transgenes be comestably established at a high frequency in mosquito populations. We also show that in circumstances where transgenic individuals exhibit some degree of discrimination against wild-type individuals, this can favour the spread of refractory alleles and lead to a significant reduction in malaria prevalence in the human population (if the efficacy of a dominant refractory mechanism exceeds at least 75%). The existence of such a non-intuitive outcome highlights the practical value of increasing the understanding of Anopheles mating preferences in the wild as a means to harness them in the implementation of population replacement approaches. Potential strategies by which previously described mating preferences of Anopheles gambiae populations could be exploited to manipulate the matechoice of transgenic release stocks are discussed.
Plan de classement
Médecine [050MEDECI] ; Epidémiologie du paludisme [052ANOPAL03] ; Génie génétique [084GENIG]
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010078837]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010078837
Contact