Mathematical Ecology Research Group, Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3PS, UK.
Mathematical Ecology Research Group, Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3PS, UK.
J Theor Biol. 2018 Nov 7;456:1-15. doi: 10.1016/j.jtbi.2018.07.024. Epub 2018 Jul 21.
Underdominance gene drives are frequency-dependent drives that aim to spread a desired homozygote genotype within a population. When the desired homozygote is released above a threshold frequency, heterozygote fitness disadvantage acts to drive the desired trait to fixation. Underdominance drives have been proposed as a way to control vector-borne disease through population suppression and replacement in a spatially contained and reversible way-benefits that directly address potential safety concerns with gene drives. Here, ecological and epidemiological dynamics are coupled to a model of mosquito genetics to investigate theoretically the impact of different types of underdominance gene drive on disease prevalence. We model systems with two engineered alleles carried either on the same pair of chromosomes at the same locus or homozygously on different pairs at different loci, genetic lethality that affects both sexes or only females, and bi-sex or male-only releases. Further, the different genetic and ecological fitness costs that can arise from genetic modification and artificial rearing are investigated through their effect on the population threshold frequency that is required to trigger the drive mechanism. We show that male-only releases must be significantly larger than bi-sex releases to trigger the underdominance drive. In addition, we find that female-specific lethality averts a higher percentage of disease cases over a control period than does bi-sex lethality. Decreases in the genetic fitness of the engineered homozygotes can increase the underdominance threshold substantially, but we find that the mating success of transgenic mosquitoes with wild-type females (influenced by a lack of competitiveness or the evolution of behavioural resistance in the form of active female mate preference) and the longevity of artificially-reared mosquitoes are vitally important to the success chances of underdominance based gene drive control efforts.
下位优势基因驱动是一种频率依赖型驱动,旨在在种群中传播所需的纯合基因型。当所需的纯合子释放频率超过阈值时,杂合子的适应度劣势会促使所需性状固定下来。下位优势驱动被提议作为一种通过空间限制和可逆的方式控制媒介传播疾病的方法,通过种群抑制和替代来实现——这些好处直接解决了基因驱动的潜在安全问题。在这里,生态和流行病学动态与蚊子遗传学模型相结合,从理论上研究了不同类型的下位优势基因驱动对疾病流行率的影响。我们对两种工程等位基因的系统进行建模,这些等位基因要么位于同一对染色体的同一基因座上,要么纯合位于不同基因座上,要么影响雌雄两性,要么仅影响雌性,要么进行双性或雄性释放。此外,通过其对触发驱动机制所需的种群阈值频率的影响,研究了可能由于遗传修饰和人工饲养而产生的不同遗传和生态适应成本。我们表明,雄性释放必须比双性释放大得多才能触发下位优势驱动。此外,我们发现,与双性致死相比,雌性特异性致死在控制期内可以避免更高比例的疾病病例。工程纯合子遗传适应度的降低可以大大增加下位优势的阈值,但我们发现,与野生型雌蚊交配的转基因蚊子的交配成功率(受缺乏竞争力或形成主动雌性配偶偏好的行为抗性进化的影响)以及人工饲养蚊子的寿命对于基于下位优势的基因驱动控制努力的成功机会至关重要。