Bill Gates Says Altered Mosquito Is Next Weapon to Fight..."Malaria"

blackzeus

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Gates Says Altered Mosquito Is Next Weapon to Fight Malaria

Bring on the genetically modified mosquitoes, Bill Gates says.

In recent years, biologists armed with a new gene-editing technology have proposed altering mosquitoes so they’re more resistant to diseases like malaria and dengue. Using a mechanism known as a “gene drive,” the researchers say they can quickly push an alteration through an entire species.

“In less in five years, I think there’s a good chance it will be out there,” Gates said in an interview with Bloomberg News before speaking at a conference of the American Society for Microbiology in Boston.


In normal reproduction, a mosquito carrying one copy of an altered gene passes it on to 50 percent of its offspring. In a gene drive, an engineered segment of DNA is inserted in the mosquito that causes 100 percent of the offspring to inherit the altered gene, dramatically increasing the rate of spread.

“Gene drives, I do think, over the next three to five years will be developed in a form that will be extremely beneficial for knocking down” mosquito populations, Gates said. “Of course, that makes it a key tool to reduce malaria deaths.”

Controversial Approach


99.5 percent of their progeny. While the technology may work, it’s controversial. Some researchers have warned that gene drives may not be safe -- what if the targeted species cross-breed with another organism? What if released mosquitoes develop spontaneous, unintended mutations? -- and have called for more regulation.


“My basic belief is that children dying of malaria is a bad thing, and that we should be able to meet these objections,” Gates said. “But there’s still a fair bit of work to be done. Nothing is ready to be deployed today.”


Through the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the Microsoft Corp. co-founder has waged a lengthy battle against malaria, committing almost $2 billion in grants to combat the disease since launching the foundation in 2000. There were about 214 million malaria cases and 438,000 deaths from the disease in 2015, according to the World Health Organization.

Infected Bugs
In the meantime, Gates says a different mosquito project already has been deployed -- one that the foundation started funding more than 15 years ago. The mosquitoes are infected with a bacterium called Wolbachia, which can block the transmission of dengue and the Zika virus. Wolbachia mosquitoes may be deployed in Colombia and Brazil in the next year, Gates said.

The idea of a gene drive isn’t new, though it’s been helped by the use of Crispr-Cas9, a gene-editing technique that’s cheaper and faster than previous methods. Working like a pair of molecular scissors, Crispr can precisely cut out, and even replace, sections of DNA. It’s given researchers an unprecedented ability to direct where DNA should be edited.

Crispr-based therapeutics for genetic diseases also are being developed, including by Editas Medicine Inc., a Cambridge, Massachusetts-based biotechnology firm backed by Gates.

Gates says he hopes to see gene editing used against HIV. His foundation has funded older gene-editing efforts against HIV, which were less efficient than Crispr. “HIV is still a lifelong disease, and any type of cure approach or some sort of way that you’d protect somebody on a lifelong basis, that would be invaluable, but that’s at a very early stage.”

While Editas isn’t working on HIV, “it’s fantastic that they’re starting with some eye diseases, looking at some things that have been completely insoluble that they may have solutions for,” he said.

Before it's here, it's on the Bloomberg Termin

Oh, so you won't accept our illuminati terms eh el presidente? ok, release the locusts :ufdup: Wouldn't be surprised if these megalomaniacs are behind the Zika virus :smh:
 

newworldafro

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Fight malaria by developing better infrastructure ........ History of Malaria in the USA - DC Mosquito Squad

^^^^Every U.S. state had malaria at one point......the only difference is we have better sewage and drainage infrastructure now......apply this to Brazil and any other country ..... :snoop: .....
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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hashmander

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ok say this works and the altered mosquitoes are now "good". what about their role in the food chain and the fish that will then eat this altered mosquito larvae?
 

ⒶⓁⒾⒶⓈ

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:scust:

Fight malaria by developing better infrastructure ........ History of Malaria in the USA - DC Mosquito Squad

^^^^Every U.S. state had malaria at one point......the only difference is we have better sewage and drainage infrastructure now......apply this to Brazil and any other country ..... :snoop: .....

:francis: Not really..it was the DDT...they sprayed the whole country with that shyt in the 40s and 50s...it broke the mosquito life cycle and ended the disease cycle but then the environmentalists protested and campaigned against it cos it caused thinning in eggshells of wild birds and got it banned.

the fukked up part is they also got its use banned worldwide so the third world didnt get to get rid of malaria before the ban..im sure if it was up to them they would rather have lost a few owls and saved millions of children.

To be fair im sure it was toxic in the right doses to people and wildlife but so is any insecticide.
 

Orbital-Fetus

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the created GMO mosquitoes in Brazil that passed on genes that rendered the species infertile.
it knocked the population down by 90% i think.

Brazil Rolls Out GM Mosquito Farms | HealthMap

Brazil has opened its first-ever, large-scale genetically modified mosquito farm in an effort to reduce the incidence of dengue fever.

The mosquitoes are a genetically modified (GM) version of the Aedes aegypti, the species responsible for transmitting the dengue virus to humans. The farm was inaugurated early last week and is expected to produce millions of GM insects each month.

Scientists at the British-based Oxitec developed a method of shortening the lifespan of the mosquitoes and reducing mosquito populations by, essentially, sterilizing them. The mosquitoes are engineered to need the antibiotic tetracycline to develop beyond adolescence. Male mosquitoes in the laboratory are given the antibiotic to reach adulthood and then released into the wild to breed with wild females. The larvae, unable to access tetracycline, die before they are fully-grown. After a few days, both the offspring and the released males are dead.

Small-scale trials of the method have shown some success in the Grand Cayman Islands, Brazil and Malaysia. After the introduction of the GM mosquitoes into the environment, A. aegypti populations were reduced to between 75 to 90 percent, compared to similar areas where the mosquitoes were not released.

Scientists are calling it a victory in the fight against dengue.

"From a scientific point of view and an environmental sustainability point of view, we think we have a really good solution to the problem," said CEO of Oxitec, Hadyn Parry.

It is easy to see why researchers are excited about the results. Dengue fever is a public health nightmare. The mosquitoes that transmit the virus feed during the day, making it difficult to kill them effectively with insecticide and the use of bed nets ineffective. The insects also lay their eggs in clean, still water, often in urban areas. There is no effective vaccine or cure, only limited treatment options, and it is widespread – affecting between 50 and 100 million people each year worldwide.

- See more at: Brazil Rolls Out GM Mosquito Farms | HealthMap
 

tmonster

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nah don't fix the roads and pave the living areas, just unleash mutated mosquitoes, that will fix everything
 
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