Lynch Penelope Anne, Boots Mike
Department of Biosciences, University of Exeter, Cornwall Campus, Penryn, United Kingdom.
Department of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley, United States.
Elife. 2016 Oct 25;5:e15416. doi: 10.7554/eLife.15416.
Evolution persistently undermines vector control programs through insecticide resistance. Here we propose a novel strategy which instead exploits evolution to generate and sustain new control tools. Effective spatial repellents are needed to keep vectors out of houses. Our approach generates such new repellents by combining a high-toxicity insecticide with a candidate repellent initially effective against only part of the vector population. By killing mosquitoes that enter treated properties the insecticide selects for vector phenotypes deflected by the repellent, increasing efficacy of the repellent against the target vector population and in turn protecting the insecticide against the spread of insecticide resistance. Using such evolved spatial repellents offers an evolutionarily sustainable, 'double-dip' system of disease control combining mortality and repellence. We formalize this idea using models which explore vector population genetics and disease transmission probabilities and show that using evolved spatial repellents is theoretically achievable, effective and sustainable.
进化通过抗药性持续破坏病媒控制项目。在此,我们提出一种新策略,即利用进化来产生并维持新的控制工具。需要有效的空间驱避剂来使病媒远离房屋。我们的方法是将高毒性杀虫剂与一种起初仅对部分病媒种群有效的候选驱避剂相结合,从而产生这种新的驱避剂。通过杀死进入已处理区域的蚊子,杀虫剂会选择出被驱避剂驱避的病媒表型,提高驱避剂对目标病媒种群的功效,进而保护杀虫剂免受抗药性传播的影响。使用这种进化后的空间驱避剂提供了一种结合死亡率和驱避作用的、具有进化可持续性的“双管齐下”疾病控制系统。我们用模型将这一想法形式化,这些模型探索病媒种群遗传学和疾病传播概率,并表明使用进化后的空间驱避剂在理论上是可行的、有效的且可持续的。