Scientists seek friendlier mosquito Publication: UPI Date: Thursday, April 22, 2004 The
University of California-Davis wants to design a transposon to boost
the effectiveness of genetically-modified mosquitoes that cannot
transmit malaria.
A transposon is a mobile piece of DNA scientists use to put genes
into an insect.Transposons are essentially DNA parasites that move in
or out of the genome under the right circumstances.
The system proposed at UC-Davis is a transposon that gives an
advantage to mosquitoes already carrying genes to block malaria, so
those genes spread through the population by natural selection, the
university said.
Postdoctoral researcher Matthew Hahn and Sergey Nuzhdin, a
professor of evolution and ecology at UC-Davis, say under current
methods the malaria resistance genes available are not effective. And
there's no way to reliably push the genes through the population.
The genetic engineering work involved in their proposal is challenging, but should be possible, Hahn said.
COPYRIGHT © UPI | |  | Canadian Supreme Court rules against farmer in biotech dispute | OTTAWA
-- Canada's highest court sided with Monsanto Co. in a seven-year
dispute over technology in farming, giving the Missouri-based
agribusiness titan broad rights under patent law to control its
genetically engineered crops. |  | Amber waves of genetically modified grain | There
was big news in St. Louis in recent weeks and bigger news in New York,
both items relating to the future of the world food supply. But the
biggest news of all was in Brussels, Belgium. We'll jet overseas on
this "international food flight" in a minute, but first, let's make the
domestic stops. |  | Time to stand up to anti-GM thugs | NEW
ZEALAND -- Call me naive if you like, but I'm really at a loss to work
out why Greenpeace has decided to focus its New Zealand anti-GM
campaign on genetically modified soybean meal fed to chickens. |  | Europe's okay for GM corn sparks row over democracy, safeguards | A
fresh row over genetically-modified food erupted in Europe on Wednesday
after the European Commission declared the EU would allow its first
imports of a bio-engineered crop, tinned sweetcorn for human
consumption, in over five years. |  | Modified papayas protected from virus | 'Biotech
products should be regulated. And that regulation should be based on
science, something which is not universally the case now.' |  | Argentina applauds EU's lifting of ban on GMOs | BUENOS
AIRES -- Farm sector representatives in Argentina, the world's
second-largest producer of genetically modified (GMO) crops, praised
the European Union's lifting of a five-year ban on new GMO foods even
though Argentine exports will not benefit immediately. |  | |
 |