Health. ‘Mosquito birth control’ drug could be ready in five years

Reuters Updated - January 09, 2019 at 09:19 PM.

Scientists in the US has said that they had taken a major step toward developing a “mosquito birth control” drug to curb the spread of malaria and other killer diseases blamed for hundreds of thousands of deaths a year.

Researchers at the University of Arizona said they had discovered a protein unique to female mosquitoes which is critical for their young to hatch.

When the scientists blocked the protein, the females laid eggs with defective shells causing the embryos inside to die.

The team said developing drugs which targeted the protein could provide a way to reduce mosquito populations without harming beneficial insects such as bees.

“It’s an important discovery,” said Roger Miesfeld, head of the university’s department of chemistry and biochemistry.

“We’re certainly excited about it ... This gets around mosquito resistance and also has a much better chance of being bio-safe (than other methods).”

Malaria infected around 216 million people in 2016, killing 445,000 of them.

Published on January 9, 2019 15:47