Thursday 25 April 2019

The Conversation/Mamadou Coulibaly: Fight against malaria needs combination of innovative science and communities

The Conversation
    Edition:

Available editions
Africa

    Job Board

    Become an author
    Sign up as a reader
    Sign in

The Conversation
Academic rigour, journalistic flair

    Arts + Culture
    Business + Economy
    Education
    Environment + Energy
    Health + Medicine
    Politics + Society
    Science + Technology
    In French

Fight against malaria needs combination of innovative science and communities
November 22, 2018 3.25pm SAST
Author

    Mamadou Coulibaly

    Head, Malaria Research and Training Center, Université des sciences, des techniques et des technologies de Bamako

Disclosure statement

Mamadou Coulibaly does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.
Partners

AUF (Agence Universitaire de la Francophonie)

AUF (Agence Universitaire de la Francophonie) provides funding as a member of The Conversation FR.

The Conversation is funded by the National Research Foundation, eight universities, including the Cape Peninsula University of Technology, Rhodes University, Stellenbosch University and the Universities of Cape Town, Johannesburg, Kwa-Zulu Natal, Pretoria, and South Africa. It is hosted by the Universities of the Witwatersrand and Western Cape, the African Population and Health Research Centre and the Nigerian Academy of Science. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is a Strategic Partner. more
Republish this article

Republish
Republish our articles for free, online or in print, under Creative Commons licence.
Bed nets treated with insecticide have been effective in fighting malaria in Africa. Shutterstock

    Email
    Twitter5
    Facebook31
    LinkedIn
    Print

Current strategies to prevent malaria using bed nets and insecticides protect millions of people from malaria-transmitting mosquitoes. Last year 175 million bed nets treated with insecticide were delivered across sub-Saharan Africa. Between 2000 and 2015 bed nets are estimated to have prevented an estimated 450 million malaria cases.

But these measures offer only limited protection. According to the latest World Malaria Report, 44% of people in African countries with high malaria rates don’t have access to bed nets and insecticides. Even when they are available, they’re not failsafe. For example, the use of bed nets has been linked to an increase in mosquitoes biting outdoors, and they can also develop resistance to the insecticide.

Worldwide there were 435,000 deaths last year from malaria. Over 90% were in Africa. This means that scientists need to redouble efforts to develop new, complementary measures to eliminate the disease.

One promising solution includes reducing the population of malaria mosquitoes through genetic modification to help reach the target of ending transmission.

Target Malaria, a research consortium working across the USA, Europe and Africa, is in the early stages of developing a genetically modified mosquito that can either produce only male offspring or reduce female fertility in subsequent generations.

Where I work in Mali, we are currently studying local mosquito populations to help inform work on genetic modification.

Though the scientific research often gets the limelight, the process also involves working side by side with local communities from the very beginning. This engagement helps us get not only the communities’ feedback but also their active participation.
Genetic modification

Our work in Mali involves trying to understand the mosquito species that are responsible for malaria transmission and to gather as much baseline data as possible on the local malaria mosquitoes. These data include: abundance, biting and resting behaviour, migration, effective population size. This is a crucial first step that will be the basis for further work in our country.

Genetic modification could be achieved in one of two ways.

The first is to bias the sex ratio so future offspring would be all males. This is done by fragmenting the X chromosome in the males so they only pass on a Y chromosome. As a result, their offspring is male (XY), as a female would need to inherit an X from each parent (XX).

The second way is to reduce female fertility. This is achieved by targeting the gene responsible for fertility in females. A female that has one copy of this fertility gene disrupted will be able to reproduce normally, but when both copies within her chromosomes are disrupted, the female cannot produce viable offspring, reducing the mosquito population.

But as the science to make this possible gets closer, we must ensure that the public debate around such a novel and potentially transformative technology also keeps up.

This means not only exploring what we can do in a laboratory, but exploring and understanding what is acceptable to the communities most affected by such innovations. We need to ensure that any new malaria control method fully meets their needs.
Involving communities

In Mali, where Target Malaria has been working since 2012, there is an ongoing dialogue at national, regional and community levels.

Our teams visit the communities around our in-sectary where insects are kept and studied, as well as field sites nearly every week and community members visit our laboratories. We also get permission from individual households to collect mosquitoes from homes or compounds. And we ask communities before we catch mosquitoes in swarms.

But engagement is not just about information and acceptance, it’s also about collaboration. Our “relay” staff, who live in the communities, can provide information even when we are not there.

On top of this we respect the decision-making processes of each individual village regardless of how different the processes can be.

We will continue following this way of doing things for each subsequent phase of our work.

The reason for such extensive and transparent engagement is clear.

As researchers, our role is not only to determine whether the genetic alteration of mosquitoes to stop malaria is scientifically possible. It is also to ensure that this can be done ethically and responsibly to meet the needs of the affected population. We can only do this by involving them.

    Malaria
    Genetic modification
    Mali
    Mosquitoes
    malaria nets
    Malaria control
    RandD
    Genetic research
    Malaria vector

    Tweet
    Share
    Get newsletter

You might also like
How higher temperatures and pollution are affecting mosquitoes
The quest to save the banana from extinction
Africa needs a heavy dose of investment in genomics research
Stowaway mozzies enter Australia from Asian holiday spots – and they’re resistant to insecticides
Sign in to comment
2 Comments
Oldest Newest

    Pierre Rossouw

    logged in via Google

    I am just a scientist, not involved directly with malaria research, although fellows of mine are.  I understand that malaria is classified a a preventable disease? 

    Why the new hi-tech approach? Does it not have sufficient social status?  I’m not being difficult, just have confusing feedback.
    5 months ago
    Report

    This comment has been automatically flagged for inspection by a moderator.

Most popular on The Conversation

    Cape Town’s taxi violence is rooted in attempts to govern competition
    Rekindling hope is the missing elixir needed to fix South Africa’s economy
    How portrayal of protest in South Africa denigrates poor people
    Meet the mini frogs of Madagascar – the new species we’ve discovered
    South Africa’s reading crisis is a cognitive catastrophe

    Student resistance in South Africa: the SASO nine trial and Steve Biko
    Southern African countries won’t manage disasters unless they work together
    How the open access model hurts academics in poorer countries
    Data, statistics and hydrology can reveal key truths about Lake Chad
    Fanon and the politics of truth and lying in a colonial society

Expert Database

    Find experts with knowledge in:*

Want to write?

Write an article and join a growing community of more than 83,000 academics and researchers from 2,819 institutions.

Register now
The Conversation
Community

    Community standards
    Republishing guidelines
    Research and Expert Database
    Analytics
    Job Board
    Our feeds

Company

    Who we are
    Our charter
    Our team
    Partners and funders
    Resource for media
    Contact us

Stay informed and subscribe to our free daily newsletter and get the latest analysis and commentary directly in your inbox.
Email address
Follow us on social media

Privacy policy Terms and conditions Corrections

Copyright © 2010–2019, The Conversation Africa, Inc.

No comments: