Hardy Christopher M
Invasive Animals Cooperative Research Centre, CSIRO Entomology, GPO Box 1700, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia.
Soc Reprod Fertil Suppl. 2007;63:495-506.
Over the past fifteen years, considerable progress has been made in developing biological agents to control wild pest animals that limit fertility rather than increase mortality. The approach, termed virally vectored immunocontraception (VVIC), involves genetically engineering viruses that stimulate the immune system of an infected animal to attack its own reproductive cells, thus rendering it sterile. Our program has focused on the development of mouse-specific viruses that cause infertility by triggering an autoimmune response against the zona pellucida proteins that surround the developing oocyte. The immunocontraceptive vaccine is intended to be transmissible (self-disseminating), and in conjunction with other management practices, will be used to help prevent mouse plagues in Australia. Results from laboratory and field studies so far support the feasibility of applying a recombinant self-disseminating murine cytomegalovirus expressing mouse zona pellucida subunit 3 for mouse control.
在过去的十五年里,在开发用于控制野生有害动物的生物制剂方面取得了相当大的进展,这些生物制剂旨在限制其繁殖力而非增加死亡率。这种方法被称为病毒载体免疫避孕(VVIC),它涉及对病毒进行基因工程改造,以刺激受感染动物的免疫系统攻击其自身的生殖细胞,从而使其不育。我们的项目专注于开发针对小鼠的病毒,这些病毒通过引发针对围绕发育中卵母细胞的透明带蛋白的自身免疫反应来导致不育。这种免疫避孕疫苗旨在具有传播性(自我传播),并与其他管理措施相结合,将用于帮助预防澳大利亚的鼠灾。迄今为止,实验室和现场研究的结果支持了应用表达小鼠透明带亚基3的重组自我传播鼠巨细胞病毒来控制小鼠的可行性。