Ethical dilemma: Should we get rid of mosquitoes? - Talya Hackett

1,108,842 views ・ 2023-01-31

TED-Ed


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Because of the pathogens they carry,
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mosquitoes are responsible for more human deaths every year than any other animal,
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including other humans.
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But very few of the 3,500 mosquito species
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actually transmit deadly diseases to humans.
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So what if we could get rid of the most lethal mosquitoes?
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Over the last two decades,
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scientists have begun conducting experiments using engineered technologies
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called “gene drives” that could theoretically do just that.
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So, should we?
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To begin grappling with this question,
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we have to get a sense of how the technology works.
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In the usual process of inheritance,
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the genomes of each parent recombine randomly.
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So their offspring end up with the DNA that’s a rough 50/50 mix
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from their parents.
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But gene drives thwart this process and ensure they're passed on.
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Gene drives are found in nature but,
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using new gene-editing technology,
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scientists have also begun engineering them in contained labs.
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For example, in a 2018 study,
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researchers injected a gene drive into mosquito eggs
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that made females sterile when they had two copies of the modified gene.
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Such a modification would usually disappear quickly.
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But it spread.
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The modified mosquitoes passed the gene drive onto some of their offspring.
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The gene drive, which they inherited on one chromosome,
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copied itself onto the other chromosome in the offspring’s sperm and egg cells,
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ensuring it was passed on to their offspring,
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regardless of which chromosome they received.
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This process repeated as all males that carried the gene
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and all females that had one copy of it, continued reproducing,
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spreading the gene drive.
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As they did, they produced more females that had two copies of the gene—
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and would therefore sterile.
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With a near 100% inheritance rate, the gene spread through the population
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and within 12 generations almost all females were sterile,
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and the populations crashed.
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In 2020, the same team achieved a similar result
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with a gene drive that made populations male-only.
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Gene drives have proven powerful in the lab.
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So, implementing them in the wild is a big decision—
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one that’s being considered because of how the fight
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against mosquito-borne diseases is going.
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Existing mosquito control measures, like insecticide-treated bed nets,
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helped reduce the number of deaths from malaria,
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the deadliest mosquito-borne disease, between 2000 and 2019.
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But fatalities have begun rising again.
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Many mosquitoes have developed insecticide resistance—
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and insecticides kill more than just mosquitoes.
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In addition to the first-ever malaria vaccine,
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approved in October of 2021,
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many see promise in gene drives.
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Experts are researching what it would look like to specifically target
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the deadliest mosquito populations with this technology.
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Like Anopheles gambiae, for instance:
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the species overwhelmingly responsible for spreading malaria in Equatorial Africa,
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which experiences the vast majority of mosquito-related fatalities.
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The idea is that, when a gene-drive-affected population
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of Anopheles gambiae drops low enough,
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it would break the malaria transmission cycle.
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But before gene drive mosquitoes are actually released into the wild,
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some big questions need answers.
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Like, could gene drives cross into and cause the collapse of non-target species?
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It doesn’t seem that many mosquito species interbreed,
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making this unlikely,
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but scientists are conducting research to be certain.
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And how might a mosquito population’s collapse affect ecosystems?
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One team is examining the feces and stomach contents
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of insectivores in Ghana to gauge the role of Anopheles gambiae in local food webs.
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And researchers are investigating
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whether suppressing populations could make other insects more vulnerable
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or leave a niche open that a harmful species could occupy.
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Scientists are also exploring alternatives to population collapse,
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like gene drives that instead make mosquitoes resistant
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to the malaria parasite.
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And others are developing countermeasures to reverse
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the effects of gene drives if needed.
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Meanwhile, some people have called for gene drive research to halt
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out of concern for the possible consequences.
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This raises another question: who should decide whether to release gene drives?
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It’s essential that communities, scientists, regulators,
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and governments of the countries most affected by mosquito-borne diseases
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be highly involved in the research and decision-making processes.
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Conversations are currently underway at all levels
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to establish a system to manage this new area of research—
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and the ethical questions it carries.
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