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» 29.03.2010 - Nigerian scientists to revolutionise cowpea breeding











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Africa
Science - Education | Health

Mosquitoes with 'selfish genes' may help fight malaria

afrol News / SciDev.Net, 2 April - "Selfish genes" are key to driving populations of mosquitoes resistant to malaria and dengue fever into wild populations, say researchers. Scientists have managed to create genetically modified (GM) mosquitoes resistant to malaria and dengue fever, but they need to ensure that the GM populations dominate the natural ones to achieve significant disease control.

To do this, genes conferring resistance need to be combined with genes that ensure the dominance of resistant mosquitoes over the natural population.

Research published in the prestigious journal 'Science' last week identifies a class of selfish genes known as "Medea" elements that could be used to this effect. Medea gene manipulation induces the death of all offspring that do not inherit the required genetic code. It is thought to work by encoding both a toxin and an antidote - if the toxin is present in the mother's eggs without the antidote, offspring die.

The researchers - Bruce Hay, Chun-Hong Chen and colleagues from the US-based California Institute of Technology - created a synthetic Medea-like genetic element in the frutifly Drosophila.

Instead of making a genetic element that coded for a toxin, they made elements that silenced a gene called Myd88. Myd88 is crucial to the early development of fruitfly embryos.

Embryos resulting from these eggs died. But if the embryos carried the team's Medea element - an antidote in the form of an extra copy of the Myd88 gene switched on after fertilisation - development was normal.

The next step, say the researchers, is to add a resistance gene into the element to ensure that the flies are resistant to disease. They point out that to successfully decrease malaria and dengue fever infection rates, the genes that convey dominance and those that provide resistance must be tightly linked.

The technology should be transferable to mosquitoes once researchers know more about the genes involved in mosquito development.

Kenneth Olson of North Carolina State University, United States, says the new study is a big step forward in making the notion of transgenic mosquitoes "fly", according to 'Science'.

Dengue fever kills about 20,000 of the 50 million people it infects annually worldwide. Malaria kills more than a million people globally, mostly young children in Africa, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO).


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Rwanda
Rwanda succeeds including citizens in formal financial sector

afrol News - It is called "financial inclusion", and it is a key government policy in Rwanda. The goal is that, by 2020, 90 percent of the population is to have and actively use bank accounts. And in only four years, financial inclusion has doubled in Rwanda.

Famine warning: "South Sudan is imploding"

afrol News - The UN's humanitarian agencies now warn about a devastating famine in Sudan and especially in South Sudan, where the situation is said to be "imploding". Relief officials are appealing to donors to urgently fund life-saving activities in the two countries.
Guinea
Panic in West Africa after Ebola outbreak in Guinea

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Ethiopia
Ethiopia tightens its already strict anti-gay laws

afrol News - It is already a crime being homosexual in Ethiopia, but parliament is now making sure the anti-gay laws will be applied in practical life. No pardoning of gays will be allowed in future, but activist fear this only is a signal of further repression being prepared.
Ethiopia
Ethiopia plans Africa's biggest dam

afrol News / Africa Renewal - Ethiopia's ambitious plan to build a US$ 4.2 billion dam in the Benishangul-Gumuz region, 40 km from its border with Sudan, is expected to provide 6,000 megawatts of electricity, enough for its population plus some excess it can sell to neighbouring countries.



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