Insecticides have been a linchpin of crop production for hundreds of years. But nothing lasts forever, and insects have mutated over time to survive and thrive despite the chemicals.
Resistance has forced farmers to increase the types and amounts of chemicals they use, which isn’t ideal for human health or the environment.
Enter: Gene-drive technologies. Based on CRISPR gene editing, this tech has the potential to protect crops and decrease the amount of pesticides needed to ward off pests.
This new technology developed by geneticists at the University of California-San Diego is called e-Drive. According to the study, published in Nature Communications, e-Drive “genetically modifies the insecticide-resistant genes and replaces them with pesticide-susceptible genes.”
Soundbite: “We have developed an efficient biological approach to reverse insecticide resistance without creating any other perturbation to the environment. The e-Drive is programmed to act transiently and then disappear from the population.” — Ethan Bier, study author
Dive in: A small group of DNA elements, or a genetic “cassette” was created and inserted into fruit flies. The cassette spreads through CRISPR gene editing, and eventually the gene is swapped for a native copy that’s susceptible to insecticides.
When cassette-carrying insects are brought into a target population, they randomly mate, and the e-Drive cassette is passed down to the next generation. The occurrence of the cassette decreases in each generation until it disappears in about 8-10 generations. Because of the self-eliminating nature of e-Drive, it can be introduced and re-introduced as often as needed.
This is kind of a big deal, as researchers are now looking to develop a similar e-Drive system in mosquitoes to lessen the spread of malaria.
The Price-Gouging Ban Plan?
Vice President Kamala Harris says when she’s in charge, there will be a price-gouging ban. Say...
‘Til the Cows (Hopefully) Come Home: U.S. Beef Inventory Low
Where’s the beef? Well, it’s dwindling in the U.S. Steaks are low: The U.S. beef cow inventory is...
State of the Flu: Birds and Bovines Continue to Battle H5N1
Although bird flu is a perennial concern among poultry producers nationwide, the 2024 bird flu...