Nature Communications (Jun 2024)

Targeting mosquito X-chromosomes reveals complex transmission dynamics of sex ratio distorting gene drives

  • Daniella An Haber,
  • Yael Arien,
  • Lee Benjamin Lamdan,
  • Yehonathan Alcalay,
  • Chen Zecharia,
  • Flavia Krsticevic,
  • Elad Shmuel Yonah,
  • Rotem Daniel Avraham,
  • Elzbieta Krzywinska,
  • Jaroslaw Krzywinski,
  • Eric Marois,
  • Nikolai Windbichler,
  • Philippos Aris Papathanos

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-49387-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Engineered sex ratio distorters (SRDs) have been proposed as a powerful component of genetic control strategies designed to suppress harmful insect pests. Two types of CRISPR-based SRD mechanisms have been proposed: X-shredding, which eliminates X-bearing sperm, and X-poisoning, which eliminates females inheriting disrupted X-chromosomes. These differences can have a profound impact on the population dynamics of SRDs when linked to the Y-chromosome: an X-shredder is invasive, constituting a classical meiotic Y-drive, whereas X-poisoning is self-limiting, unable to invade but also insulated from selection. Here, we establish X-poisoning strains in the malaria vector Anopheles gambiae targeting three X-linked genes during spermatogenesis, resulting in male bias. We find that sex distortion is primarily driven by a loss of X-bearing sperm, with limited evidence for postzygotic lethality of female progeny. By leveraging a Drosophila melanogaster model, we show unambiguously that engineered SRD traits can operate differently in these two insects. Unlike X-shredding, X-poisoning could theoretically operate at early stages of spermatogenesis. We therefore explore premeiotic Cas9 expression to target the mosquito X-chromosome. We find that, by pre-empting the onset of meiotic sex chromosome inactivation, this approach may enable the development of Y-linked SRDs if mutagenesis of spermatogenesis-essential genes is functionally balanced.