Spot the males: New gene-editing method could transform mosquito control
Spot the males: New gene-editing method could transform mosquito control
Tags: Genetically modified mosquitoes, Mosquitoes, Sex SeparationRobert Egan, Phys.org, 2025.
Researchers have developed a new “color-coded” genetic method that makes it easy to distinguish male and female mosquitoes. This innovation can help solve a major bottleneck in mosquito control strategies that rely on releasing only sterile males. The approach uses gene editing to produce dark males and pale females, offering a practical and safer alternative to current sex-separation techniques. A new study led by Doron Zaada and Prof. Philippos Papathanos from the Department of Entomology at Hebrew University, introduces a powerful genetic approach for separating male and female mosquitoes, an essential step for large-scale mosquito control programs aimed at reducing the spread of infectious diseases such as Dengue, Zika, and Chikungunya. Mosquito control strategies based on the mass release of males rely on the complete removal of females, which bite and transmit disease. Existing separation methods, largely based on size differences at the pupal stage, are labor-intensive, difficult to scale, and prone to letting biting females slip through. This new study presents a genetically engineered “Genetic Sexing Strain” (GSS) of the Asian tiger mosquito (Aedes albopictus) that allows sexes to be sorted automatically based on visible pigmentation.

