New bacteria to take on dengue, zika
- Posted By
10Pointer
- Categories
Science & Technology
- Published
8th Jul, 2022
-
Context
Wolbachia bacteria will help to put an end to dengue, chikungunya and zika by blocking the proliferation of harmful viruses but don't harm the mosquitoes themselves.
What is Wolbachia?
- Wolbachia are extremely common bacteria that occur naturally in 50 per cent of insect species, including some mosquitoes, fruit flies, moths, dragonflies and butterflies.
- Wolbachia are safe for humans and the environment.
- Independent risk analyses indicate that the release of Wolbachia-infected mosquitoes poses negligible risk to humans and the environment.
- Wolbachia live inside insect cells and are passed from one generation to the next through an insect’s eggs.
- The Wolbachia is maternally transmitted from mother to offspring and gradually spreads across the population.
- The Wolbachia inhibits the multiplication of the dengue virus when present in the mosquitoes.
- The number and frequency of Wolbachia in mosquitoes is determined by molecular tests.
How does the Wolbachia method work?
- Aedes aegypti mosquitoes carry Wolbachia, the bacteria compete with viruses like dengue, Zika, chikungunya and yellow fever.
- This makes it harder for viruses to reproduce inside the mosquitoes. And the mosquitoes are much less likely to spread viruses from person to person.
- This means that when Aedes aegypti mosquitoes carry natural Wolbachia bacteria, the transmission of viruses like dengue, Zika, chikungunya and yellow fever is reduced.
Approaches to use Wolbachia
- There are two approaches to tackling dengue with Wolbachia.
- The first involves releasing only modified male mosquitoes.
- Since 2015, this strategy has been successfully adopted in Singapore and Guangzhou, China, and in parts of the United States, such as Miami, Texas and California.
- Because eggs produced from unmodified females that mate with modified males do not hatch, the number of mosquitoes in the community is greatly reduced.
- The second approach, used by some cities in Vietnam, Indonesia, Malaysia, Brazil and Australia, among others, involves releasing modified mosquitoes of both sexes.
- The infected females pass the bacteria to their offspring.
- Over time (several months to years, depending on characteristics of the release site), the modified mosquitoes replace the native population.