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Gene drive that results in addiction to a temperature-sensitive version of an essential gene triggers population collapse in Drosophila .

Georg OberhoferTobin IvyBruce A Hay
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2022)
One strategy for population suppression seeks to use gene drive to spread genes that confer conditional lethality or sterility, providing a way of combining population modification with suppression. Stimuli of potential interest could be introduced by humans, such as an otherwise benign virus or chemical, or occur naturally on a seasonal basis, such as a change in temperature. Cleave and Rescue ( ClvR ) selfish genetic elements use Cas9 and guide RNAs (gRNAs) to disrupt endogenous versions of an essential gene while also including a Rescue version of the essential gene resistant to disruption. ClvR spreads by creating loss-of-function alleles of the essential gene that select against those lacking it, resulting in populations in which the Rescue provides the only source of essential gene function. As a consequence, if function of the Rescue , a kind of Trojan horse now omnipresent in a population, is condition dependent, so too will be the survival of that population. To test this idea, we created a ClvR in Drosophila in which Rescue activity of an essential gene, dribble , requires splicing of a temperature-sensitive intein (TS- ClvR dbe ). This element spreads to transgene fixation at 23 °C, but when populations now dependent on Ts- ClvR db e are shifted to 29 °C, death and sterility result in a rapid population crash. These results show that conditional population elimination can be achieved. A similar logic, in which Rescue activity is conditional, could also be used in homing-based drive and to bring about suppression and/or killing of specific individuals in response to other stimuli.
Keyphrases
  • genome wide
  • copy number
  • genome wide identification
  • transcription factor
  • dna methylation
  • genome wide analysis
  • climate change
  • crispr cas
  • psychometric properties
  • human health