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Dive into the research topics where Andrew Hammond is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrew Hammond.


Nature Biotechnology | 2016

A CRISPR-Cas9 gene drive system targeting female reproduction in the malaria mosquito vector Anopheles gambiae

Andrew Hammond; Roberto Galizi; Kyros Kyrou; Alekos Simoni; Carla Siniscalchi; Dimitris Katsanos; Matthew Gribble; Dean A. Baker; Eric Marois; Steven Russell; Austin Burt; Nikolai Windbichler; Andrea Crisanti; Tony Nolan

Gene drive systems that enable super-Mendelian inheritance of a transgene have the potential to modify insect populations over a timeframe of a few years. We describe CRISPR-Cas9 endonuclease constructs that function as gene drive systems in Anopheles gambiae, the main vector for malaria. We identified three genes (AGAP005958, AGAP011377 and AGAP007280) that confer a recessive female-sterility phenotype upon disruption, and inserted into each locus CRISPR-Cas9 gene drive constructs designed to target and edit each gene. For each targeted locus we observed a strong gene drive at the molecular level, with transmission rates to progeny of 91.4 to 99.6%. Population modeling and cage experiments indicate that a CRISPR-Cas9 construct targeting one of these loci, AGAP007280, meets the minimum requirement for a gene drive targeting female reproduction in an insect population. These findings could expedite the development of gene drives to suppress mosquito populations to levels that do not support malaria transmission.


Scientific Reports | 2016

A CRISPR-Cas9 sex-ratio distortion system for genetic control.

Roberto Galizi; Andrew Hammond; Kyros Kyrou; Chrysanthi Taxiarchi; Federica Bernardini; Samantha O'Loughlin; Philippos-Aris Papathanos; Tony Nolan; Nikolai Windbichler; Andrea Crisanti

Genetic control aims to reduce the ability of insect pest populations to cause harm via the release of modified insects. One strategy is to bias the reproductive sex ratio towards males so that a population decreases in size or is eliminated altogether due to a lack of females. We have shown previously that sex ratio distortion can be generated synthetically in the main human malaria vector Anopheles gambiae, by selectively destroying the X-chromosome during spermatogenesis, through the activity of a naturally-occurring endonuclease that targets a repetitive rDNA sequence highly-conserved in a wide range of organisms. Here we describe a CRISPR-Cas9 sex distortion system that targets ribosomal sequences restricted to the member species of the Anopheles gambiae complex. Expression of Cas9 during spermatogenesis resulted in RNA-guided shredding of the X-chromosome during male meiosis and produced extreme male bias among progeny in the absence of any significant reduction in fertility. The flexibility of CRISPR-Cas9 combined with the availability of genomic data for a range of insects renders this strategy broadly applicable for the species-specific control of any pest or vector species with an XY sex-determination system by targeting sequences exclusive to the female sex chromosome.


PLOS Genetics | 2017

The creation and selection of mutations resistant to a gene drive over multiple generations in the malaria mosquito

Andrew Hammond; Kyros Kyrou; Marco Bruttini; Ace North; Roberto Galizi; Xenia Karlsson; Nace Kranjc; Francesco Martino Carpi; Romina D’Aurizio; Andrea Crisanti; Tony Nolan

Gene drives have enormous potential for the control of insect populations of medical and agricultural relevance. By preferentially biasing their own inheritance, gene drives can rapidly introduce genetic traits even if these confer a negative fitness effect on the population. We have recently developed gene drives based on CRISPR nuclease constructs that are designed to disrupt key genes essential for female fertility in the malaria mosquito. The construct copies itself and the associated genetic disruption from one homologous chromosome to another during gamete formation, a process called homing that ensures the majority of offspring inherit the drive. Such drives have the potential to cause long-lasting, sustainable population suppression, though they are also expected to impose a large selection pressure for resistance in the mosquito. One of these population suppression gene drives showed rapid invasion of a caged population over 4 generations, establishing proof of principle for this technology. In order to assess the potential for the emergence of resistance to the gene drive in this population we allowed it to run for 25 generations and monitored the frequency of the gene drive over time. Following the initial increase of the gene drive we observed a gradual decrease in its frequency that was accompanied by the spread of small, nuclease-induced mutations at the target gene that are resistant to further cleavage and restore its functionality. Such mutations showed rates of increase consistent with positive selection in the face of the gene drive. Our findings represent the first documented example of selection for resistance to a synthetic gene drive and lead to important design recommendations and considerations in order to mitigate for resistance in future gene drive applications.


Genetics | 2017

Requirements for Driving Anti-pathogen Effector Genes into Populations of Disease Vectors by Homing

Andrea Beaghton; Andrew Hammond; Tony Nolan; Andrea Crisanti; H. Charles J. Godfray; Austin Burt

There is a need for new interventions against the ongoing burden of vector-borne diseases such as malaria and dengue. One suggestion has been to develop genes encoding effector molecules that block parasite development within the vector, and then use the nuclease-based homing reaction as a form of gene drive to spread those genes through target populations. If the effector gene reduces the fitness of the mosquito and does not contribute to the drive, then loss-of-function mutations in the effector will eventually replace functional copies, but protection may nonetheless persist sufficiently long to provide a public health benefit. Here, we present a quantitative model allowing one to predict the duration of protection as a function of the probabilities of different molecular processes during the homing reaction, various fitness effects, and the efficacy of the effector in blocking transmission. Factors that increase the duration of protection include reducing the frequency of pre-existing resistant alleles, the probability of nonrecombinational DNA repair, the probability of homing-associated loss of the effector, the fitness costs of the nuclease and effector, and the completeness of parasite blocking. For target species that extend over an area much larger than the typical dispersal distance, the duration of protection is expected to be highest at the release site, and decrease away from there, eventually falling to zero, as effector-less drive constructs replace effector-containing ones. We also model an alternative strategy of using the nuclease to target an essential gene, and then linking the effector to a sequence that restores the essential function and is resistant to the nuclease. Depending upon parameter values, this approach can prolong the duration of protection. Our models highlight the key design criteria needed to achieve a desired level of public health benefit.


Developmental and Comparative Immunology | 2017

The Anopheles FBN9 immune factor mediates Plasmodium species-specific defense through transgenic fat body expression.

Maria L. Simões; Yuemei Dong; Andrew Hammond; Ann Hall; Andrea Crisanti; Tony Nolan; George Dimopoulos

ABSTRACT Mosquitoes have a multifaceted innate immune system that is actively engaged in warding off various pathogens, including the protozoan malaria parasite Plasmodium. Various immune signaling pathways and effectors have been shown to mediate a certain degree of defense specificity against different Plasmodium species. A key pattern recognition receptor of the Anopheles gambiae immune system is the fibrinogen domain‐containing immunolectin FBN9, which has been shown to be transcriptonally induced by Plasmodium infection, and to mediate defense against both rodent and human malaria parasites and bacteria. Here we have further studied the defense specificity of FBN9 using a transgenic approach, in which FBN9 is overexpressed in the fat body tissue after a blood meal through a vitellogenin promoter. Interestingly, the Vg‐FBN9 transgenic mosquitoes showed increased resistance only to the rodent parasite P. berghei, and not to the human parasite P. falciparum, pointing to differences in the mosquitos defense mechanisms against the two parasite species. The Vg‐FBN9 transgenic mosquitoes were also more resistant to infection with both Gram‐positive and Gram‐negative bacteria and showed increased longevity when infected with P. berghei. Our study points to the importance of both experimentally depleting and enriching candidate anti‐Plasmodium effectors in functional studies in order to ascertain their suitability for the development of transgenic mosquito–based malaria control strategies. HighlightsHere we present the first FBN9 immunolectin overexpressing transgenic Anopheles gambiae.Fatbody‐mediated FBN9 defenses are Plasmodium species‐specific.Bloodmeal inducible FBN9 overexpression in the mosquito fatbody results in greater resistance to bacterial infection.Bloodmeal inducible FBN9 overexpression in the mosquito fatbody upon Plasmodium infection results in increased longevity.


Genetics | 2017

Cross-species Y chromosome function between malaria vectors of the Anopheles gambiae species complex

Federica Bernardini; Roberto Galizi; Mariana Wunderlich; Chrysanthi Taxiarchi; Nace Kranjc; Kyros Kyrou; Andrew Hammond; Tony Nolan; Mara N. K. Lawniczak; Philippos Aris Papathanos; Andrea Crisanti; Nikolai Windbichler

Y chromosome function, structure and evolution is poorly understood in many species, including the Anopheles genus of mosquitoes—an emerging model system for studying speciation that also represents the major vectors of malaria. While the Anopheline Y had previously been implicated in male mating behavior, recent data from the Anopheles gambiae complex suggests that, apart from the putative primary sex-determiner, no other genes are conserved on the Y. Studying the functional basis of the evolutionary divergence of the Y chromosome in the gambiae complex is complicated by complete F1 male hybrid sterility. Here, we used an F1 × F0 crossing scheme to overcome a severe bottleneck of male hybrid incompatibilities that enabled us to experimentally purify a genetically labeled A. gambiae Y chromosome in an A. arabiensis background. Whole genome sequencing (WGS) confirmed that the A. gambiae Y retained its original sequence content in the A. arabiensis genomic background. In contrast to comparable experiments in Drosophila, we find that the presence of a heterospecific Y chromosome has no significant effect on the expression of A. arabiensis genes, and transcriptional differences can be explained almost exclusively as a direct consequence of transcripts arising from sequence elements present on the A. gambiae Y chromosome itself. We find that Y hybrids show no obvious fertility defects, and no substantial reduction in male competitiveness. Our results demonstrate that, despite their radically different structure, Y chromosomes of these two species of the gambiae complex that diverged an estimated 1.85 MYA function interchangeably, thus indicating that the Y chromosome does not harbor loci contributing to hybrid incompatibility. Therefore, Y chromosome gene flow between members of the gambiae complex is possible even at their current level of divergence. Importantly, this also suggests that malaria control interventions based on sex-distorting Y drive would be transferable, whether intentionally or contingent, between the major malaria vector species.


Pathogens and Global Health | 2017

Gene drives to fight malaria: current state and future directions

Andrew Hammond; Roberto Galizi

Abstract Self-propagating gene drive technologies have a number of desirable characteristics that warrant their development for the control of insect pest and vector populations, such as the malaria-transmitting mosquitoes. Theoretically easy to deploy and self-sustaining, these tools may be used to generate cost-effective interventions that benefit society without obvious bias related to wealth, age or education. Their species-specific design offers the potential to reduce environmental risks and aim to be compatible and complementary with other control strategies, potentially expediting the elimination and eradication of malaria. A number of strategies have been proposed for gene-drive based control of the malaria mosquito and recent demonstrations have shown proof-of-principle in the laboratory. Though several technical, ethical and regulatory challenges remain, none appear insurmountable if research continues in a step-wise and open manner.


bioRxiv | 2018

Improved CRISPR-based suppression gene drives mitigate resistance and impose a large reproductive load on laboratory-contained mosquito populations

Andrew Hammond; Kyros Kyrou; Matthew Gribble; Xenia Karlsson; Ioanna Morianou; Roberto Galizi; Andrea Beaghton; Andrea Crisanti; Tony Nolan

CRISPR-based genes drives bias their own inheritance and can be used to modify entire populations of insect vectors of disease as a novel form of sustainable disease control. Gene drives designed to interfere with female fertility can suppress populations of the mosquito vector of malaria, however laboratory demonstrations showed strong unintended fitness costs and high levels of resistant mutations that limited the potential of the first generation of gene drives to spread. We describe three new gene drives designed to restrict spatio-temporal nuclease expression by using novel regulatory sequences. Two of the three new designs dramatically improve fitness and mitigate the creation and selection of resistance. We dissect the relative contributions of germline CRISPR activity versus embryonic CRISPR activity resulting from parental deposition, showing that the improved performance of the new designs is due to tighter germline restriction of the nuclease activity and significantly lower rates of end-joining repair in the embryo. Moreover, we demonstrate in laboratory-contained population experiments that these gene drives show remarkably improved invasion dynamics compared to the first generation drives, resulting in greater than 90% suppression of the reproductive output and a delay in the emergence of target site resistance, even at a loosely constrained target sequence. These results illustrate important considerations for gene drive design and will help expedite the development of gene drives designed to control malaria transmission in Africa.CRISPR-Cas9 nuclease-based gene drives rely on inducing chromosomal breaks in the germline that are repaired in ways that lead to a biased inheritance of the drive. Gene drives designed to impair female fertility can suppress populations of the mosquito vector of malaria. However, strong unintended fitness costs, due to ectopic nuclease expression, and high levels of resistant mutations, limited the potential of the first generation of gene drives to spread. Here we show that changes to regulatory sequences in the drive element, designed to contain nuclease expression to the germline, confer improved fecundity over previous versions and generate drastically lower rates of target site resistance. We employed a genetic screen to show that this effect is explained by reduced rates of end-joining repair of DNA breaks at the target site caused by deposited nuclease in the embryo. Highlighting the impact of deposited Cas9, many of the mutations arising from this source of nuclease activity in the embryo are heritable, thereby having the potential to generate resistant target sites that reduce the penetrance of the gene drive. Finally, in cage invasion experiments these gene drives show improved invasion dynamics compared to first generation drives, resulting in greater than 90% suppression of the reproductive output and a delay in the emergence of target site resistance, even at a resistance-prone target sequence. We shed light on the dynamics of generation and selection of resistant alleles in a population by tracking, longitudinally, the frequency of resistant alleles in the face of an invading gene drive. Our results illustrate important considerations for future gene drive design and should expedite the development of gene drives robust to resistance.


Nature Biotechnology | 2018

A CRISPR–Cas9 gene drive targeting doublesex causes complete population suppression in caged Anopheles gambiae mosquitoes

Kyros Kyrou; Andrew Hammond; Roberto Galizi; Nace Kranjc; Austin Burt; Andrea Beaghton; Tony Nolan; Andrea Crisanti

In the human malaria vector Anopheles gambiae, the gene doublesex (Agdsx) encodes two alternatively spliced transcripts, dsx-female (AgdsxF) and dsx-male (AgdsxM), that control differentiation of the two sexes. The female transcript, unlike the male, contains an exon (exon 5) whose sequence is highly conserved in all Anopheles mosquitoes so far analyzed. We found that CRISPR–Cas9-targeted disruption of the intron 4–exon 5 boundary aimed at blocking the formation of functional AgdsxF did not affect male development or fertility, whereas females homozygous for the disrupted allele showed an intersex phenotype and complete sterility. A CRISPR–Cas9 gene drive construct targeting this same sequence spread rapidly in caged mosquitoes, reaching 100% prevalence within 7–11 generations while progressively reducing egg production to the point of total population collapse. Owing to functional constraint of the target sequence, no selection of alleles resistant to the gene drive occurred in these laboratory experiments. Cas9-resistant variants arose in each generation at the target site but did not block the spread of the drive.


F1000 - Post-publication peer review of the biomedical literature | 2018

Faculty of 1000 evaluation for Synthetically engineered Medea gene drive system in the worldwide crop pest Drosophila suzukii.

Andrea Crisanti; Andrew Hammond

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Tony Nolan

Imperial College London

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Kyros Kyrou

Imperial College London

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Austin Burt

Imperial College London

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Nace Kranjc

Imperial College London

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