| Literature DB >> 28727819 |
James J Bull1, Harmit S Malik2,3.
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28727819 PMCID: PMC5519000 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1006850
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Genet ISSN: 1553-7390 Impact factor: 5.917
Fig 1Gene drive systems (GDSs).
(Top) GDSs consist of an endonuclease that cuts a specific region of the chromosome. When those nucleases are engineered into the very site that they cut, a cell that is heterozygous for the drive allele will experience a cut on the opposite, wild-type chromosome. The cell will repair the cut by copying from the intact (drive-bearing) chromosome, converting the former heterozygote into a homozygote for the drive allele. However, as an alternative to homology-based repair, the cell may use error-prone nonhomologous mechanisms to make a resistant allele that is not susceptible to the endonuclease. It is the very action of the nuclease that increases the likelihood of generating a resistant allele. (Bottom) This doubling of the drive allele in heterozygotes, if invariant and not deleterious to heterozygotes, provides a powerful evolutionary advantage. Clear individuals are wild-type homozygotes, light blue are drive heterozygotes, and gray are drive homozygotes. Introduction of just a few heterozygotes into a purely wild-type population will result in the drive allele sweeping through the population. Even when drive homozygotes die—lethal gene drive—the drive allele sweeps until everyone in the final population carries the drive allele. If the drive operates in both sexes, the final population is entirely homozygous and dead. If the drive operates in just 1 sex, the final population is a state in which half the progeny are heterozygotes, whereas the other half are homozygotes and die. Introduction of resistance alleles, particularly those that are homozygous viable (black), will impede and even reverse the spread of gene drive alleles.