Djibouti fights deadly malaria wave with GMO mosquitoes | CNN (2024)

Djiboutifights deadly malaria wave with GMO mosquitoes | CNN (1)

An Anopheles stephensi mosquito obtains a blood meal from a human host.

CNN

Genetically engineered mosquitoes have been released in the tiny East African country of Djibouti to combat a surge in malaria infections caused by an invasive vector.

This initiative started on Thursday, comes as Djibouti, one ofAfrica’s smallest nationswith just over a million residents, grapples with a dramatic increase in malaria cases, skyrocketingfrom just 27 in 2012 tomore than 70,000in recent years, according to the WHO. Thehealth body attributes the spiketo the arrival ofAnopheles stephensi, an invasive Asian mosquito species that transmit the deadly disease.

Themosquito species has also been detected in Ethiopia and Somalia, Djibouti’s neighbors in the Horn of Africa, posing a significant regional threat.

Unlike most malaria-transmitting mosquitoes in Africa that breed in rural areas, Anopheles Stephensi thrives in urban environments, intensifying the public health challenge for predominantly urban Djibouti.

Mosquito Feeding, Female Anopheles Gambiae, Malaria Vector, Parasite. BSIP/UIG via Getty Images Related article African scientist could wipe out malaria by editing mosquito DNA

“This mosquito poses a huge threat to our fight against malaria,” said Grey Frandsen, CEO of US-owned biotechnology firm Oxitec, which developed the gene-modified mosquitoes released in Djibouti.

“Anophelesstephensievade conventional tools, are resistant to insecticides and daytime-biters, reducing the efficacy of bed nets,” he said.

Djibouti health minister Ahmed Robleh Abdilleh told CNN that his nation was trying out the new technology developed by Oxitec and believes it could be a “game changer” in reducing malaria spread.

“We are in the pilot phase, but we believe in the technology. We are sure it will be the game changer,”Abdillehsaid.

‘Using mosquitoes to fight mosquitoes’

Dubbed a method that “uses mosquitoes to fight mosquitoes”, Oxitec’s genetic technology targets female mosquitoes, which are predominantly responsible for malaria transmission.

The technique involves releasing genetically engineered male mosquitoes into the wild, which then mate with females. The introduced gene prevents female offspring from surviving to adulthood, effectively reducing the population of malaria-transmitting mosquitoes. Male mosquitoes do not bite and therefore cannot transmit malaria.

Frandsen said Oxitec’s genetic technology, which is funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, has been effective in reducing other mosquito-borne viral diseases such as dengue fever in other parts of the world.

FILE - This 2014 photo made available by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows a feeding female Anopheles gambiae mosquito. The species is a known vector for the parasitic disease malaria. The United States has seen five cases of malaria spread by mosquitos in the last two months...the first time there's been local spread in 20 years. There were four cases detected in Florida and one in Texas, according to a health alert issued Monday, June 26, 2023, by the CDC. (James Gathany/CDC via AP, File) James Gathany/CDC/AP/File Related article New malaria mosquito emerges in African cities, and experts are worried

“Our technology is already proven to reduce populations of dengue-spreading Aedes aegyptimosquitoesby upwards of 95%in urban communities in Brazil, and we are committed to delivering impact in urban communities in Djibouti and beyond,” he told CNN.

“We are still at the early stages of this program, but we’re hopeful of the impact this can have in driving down malaria-spreading mosquitoes,” he added.

Although the rollout of genetically modified mosquitoes in Djibouti is only the second in Africa,the idea is drawing more interest on the continent.

In 2019, a team of scientists released Africa’s pioneer batch of gene-modified mosquitoes to gather data on the potency of the technique in Burkina Faso where malaria is a leading cause of death.

According to vector control research alliance, Target Malaria, the mosquitoes released in the west African country were“genetically modifiedto be sterile, so it can mate but cannot produce offspring.”

It added that an estimated 14,850 gene-modified male mosquitoes were released and 527 were recaptured.

“After recapturing them, the researchers found that the genetically modified mosquitoes were less mobile than their non-transgenic siblings and had lower survival rates,” the alliance said of its findings, adding that asecond trial phase was being planned in the country.

Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni announced in early January that his country is partnering with Oxitec to combat malaria.

Africa bears the brunt of the global malaria burden, accounting for 96% of malaria deaths worldwide in 2021, according to the World Health Organization.

Djibouti fights deadly malaria wave with GMO mosquitoes | CNN (2024)
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