Precision-Guided Sterile Insect Technique (pgSIT)

In News

  • Recently, researchers have created a system that restrains populations of mosquitoes that infect millions each year with debilitating diseases. 

Precision-guided sterile insect technique (pgSIT)

  • It alters genes linked to male fertility—creating sterile offspring—and female flight in Aedes aegypti, the mosquito species responsible for spreading diseases including dengue fever, chikungunya and Zika. 
  • It uses CRISPR to sterilise male mosquitoes and render female mosquitoes (which spread disease) flightless. 
  • Males don’t transmit diseases so the idea is to release more and more sterile males, so that the population can be suppressed without relying on harmful chemicals and insecticides.
  • The system is self-limiting and is not predicted to persist or spread in the environment, two safety features that should enable acceptance for this technology.
  • pgSIT eggs can be shipped to a location threatened by mosquito-borne disease or developed at an on-site facility that could produce the eggs for nearby deployment. 
  • Once the eggs are released in the wild, sterile pgSIT males will emerge and eventually mate with females, driving down the wild population as needed.

 

(Image courtesy: Cambridge )

 

CRISPR

  • CRISPR is a family of DNA sequences found in the genomes of prokaryotic organisms such as bacteria and archaea. 
  • These sequences are derived from DNA fragments of bacteriophages that had previously infected the prokaryote. 
  • They are used to detect and destroy DNA from similar bacteriophages during subsequent infections.
  • It’s a way of finding a specific bit of DNA inside a cell. After that, the next step in CRISPR gene editing is usually to alter that piece of DNA.
  • CRISPR-Cas9 technology behaves like a cut-and-paste mechanism on DNA strands that contain genetic information. The specific location of the genetic codes that need to be changed, or edited, is identified on the DNA strand, and then, using the Cas9 protein, which acts like a pair of scissors, that location is cut off from the strand.
  • Emmanuelle Charpentier of France and Jennifer A Doudna of the USA were awarded the 2020 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for developing CRISPR/Cas9 genetic scissors.

Significance

  • pgSIT eggs can be shipped to a location threatened by mosquito-borne disease or developed at an on-site facility that could produce the eggs for nearby deployment. 
  • Once the pgSIT eggs are released in the wild, sterile pgSIT males will emerge and eventually mate with females, driving down the wild population as needed.
  • CRISPR technology is a simple and powerful tool for genome editing. It easily alters DNA sequences and modifies gene function. 
  • Its many potential applications include correcting genetic defects, treating and preventing the spread of diseases and improving crops. 

Challenges

  • CRISPR: 
    • Problematic when used in humans:  
      • Leading scientists in the field have for long been calling for a “global pause” on clinical applications of the technology in human beings, until internationally accepted protocols are developed.
      • Studies highlighted that these cells might trigger cancer.
    • It may increase the risk of mutations elsewhere in the genome in those cells.
    • Total clarity on its cause, effect and usage is still not clear.
    • Ethical concerns: 
      • In addition, there are concerns with manipulating human embryos for their own interest. 
  • pgSIT:
    • The system is self-limiting and is not predicted to persist or spread in the environment, two safety features that should enable acceptance for this technology.

Conclusion

  • This study suggests pgSIT may be an efficient technology for mosquito population control and the first example of one suited for real-world release. 
  • In the future, pgSIT may provide an efficient, safe, scalable, and environmentally friendly alternative next-generation technology for wild population control of disease-spreading mosquitoes resulting in wide-scale prevention of human disease transmission.

Source: IE

 
Previous article Strategic Disinvestment
Next article Facts In News

Other News of the Day

Modern History Acharya Vinoba Bhave Syllabus : GS 1/Personalities In News The Prime Minister paid tribute to Vinoba Bhave on his birth anniversary. About  Vinayak Narahari Bhave was born in 1895 in a high-caste Brahman family. He abandoned his high school studies in 1916 to join Gandhi’s ashram (ascetic community) at Sabarmati, near Ahmedabad.  Gandhi’s...
Read More

In News Recently, the Prime Minister recalled Swami Vivekananda's famous speech at the World's Parliament of Religions in Chicago in 1893. About On September 11, 1893, Swami Vivekananda delivered his famed speech at the ‘Parliament of the World’s Religions’, garnering a full two-minute standing ovation and the moniker of ‘cyclonic monk of India’. He introduced...
Read More

In Context India's first indigenously designed High Ash Coal Gasification Based Methanol Production Plant successfully demonstrated facility to create methanol from High Ash Indian Coal. About Due to the high ash percentage of Indian coal, most internationally accessible technology did not cater to the Indian demands. Therefore, the BHEL R&D centre at Hyderabad began working...
Read More

In News  Recently, the Vice-President of India paid floral tributes to Mahakavi Subramania Bharati to mark the death centenary of the poet and freedom fighter. Who was Subramanya Bharati? He was an outstanding Indian writer of the nationalist period and is regarded as the father of the modern Tamil style. He is also known as...
Read More

In News Recently, the inaugural “2+2” Ministerial-level meeting was held between India and Australia in New Delhi. Key Highlights Indo- Pacific Cooperation: The foreign and defence ministerial talks are taking place amid renewed efforts by the Quad member countries to expand cooperation in the Indo-Pacific region. The important partnership between India and Australia is based...
Read More

In News Prime Minister Narendra Modi is soon expected to launch the National Intelligence Grid or NATGRID. Earlier MOU in this context  MOU between NATGRID & National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) NATGRID has signed a memorandum of understanding(MoU) in July 2020 with the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) to access the centralised online database on...
Read More