STOP MATING

Novel Strategies to Disrupt Mosquito Mating for Vector Control

About the Project

STOP-MATING is a European research initiative

Funded under the MSCA Staff Exchange programme (HORIZON-MSCA-2023-SE-01), STOP-MATING starts in 2024 to bring together interdisciplinary experts to design novel vector control approaches to disrupt the mating behaviour of disease-transmitting mosquitoes. Our aim is to understand the molecular and neurobiological mechanisms underlying mosquito mating and to develop novel tools to target this mechanism and reduce mosquito population numbers. Our interdisciplinary consortium bridges research in bioinformatics, neuroscience, biophysics, biotechnology, field ecology and vector control to address the emergent challenge of mosquito-borne disease geographical expansion. Our goal is to both provide basic biology knowledge and develop novel vector control tools.

Objectives

Identify molecular and neurological targets involved in mosquito mating.

Develop gene knockouts and analyze changes in mating behaviour in key mosquito species.

Develop standardized protocols and assays to study mosquito mating and related behaviours both in the lab and the field.

Validate biological targets across mosquito species and environments through international fieldwork.

Improve our understanding of mosquito mating behaviour in natural settings.

Translate discoveries into innovative tools to stop mosquito reproduction (e.g., acoustic lures, gene drives, mating disruptors).

Promote staff exchange, capacity building and knowledge transfer across institutions.

Vision & Values

Our vision is to reduce the global burden of mosquito-borne diseases through targeted disruption of mosquito mating behaviour, by combining cutting-edge research with responsible innovation.

We believe that excellence in science must go hand in hand with inclusiveness, ethics, and long-term impact. Our work is rooted in real-world needs and is shaped by collaboration between European and African institutions, academic and industrial sectors, and multiple scientific disciplines.

Core values:

Scientific excellence and research integrity aligned with European standards.

Ethical responsibility, including respect for biodiversity and fundamental rights.

Gender equality and support for women scientists in all regions.

Open science, data sharing, and reproducibility.

Global equity and collaboration between Europe and Africa.

Sustainability through long-term capacity building and researcher training.

Scientific Approach

STOP-MATING combines bioinformatics, wet lab and field-based research to understand and disrupt mosquito mating behaviour. Our scientific strategy includes:

Bioinformatics analysis to identify candidate genes involved in mosquito mating behaviour.

Transcriptomics and CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing to uncover and manipulate mating-related genes.

Auditory and behavioural tests to study the neurobiological basis of mosquito mating behaviour.

Ecological studies in Madagascar and the Central African Republic to improve our understanding of mating behaviour in natural malaria mosquito populations.

Field-deployable solutions to disrupt mosquito mating such as acoustic lures, mating disruptors and gene drive technologies.

Governance

Project Coordinator (CSIC): Oversees execution, timelines, and reporting.

Work Package Leaders: Manage the scientific delivery and internal coordination.

Secondment Hosts: Facilitate researcher mobility, integration, and supervision.

Project Board: Decision-making body composed of WP leads and the coordinator.

Secondments

Secondments are the heart of STOP-MATING. Researchers are exchanged between institutions to foster international, intersectoral and interdisciplinary collaboration, in line with the goals of the MSCA Staff Exchange scheme.
These mobility experiences promote knowledge sharing, hands-on learning, and strong cooperation between scientific and technical teams in Europe and Africa.

Key features:

Bilateral or multilateral staff exchange across European and African partners.

Intersectoral exchanges including academic organisations and industrial partners.

Mobility plans aligned with research tasks in each WP.

Capacity building through real-time lab/field collaboration.

Mobility monitoring and best practices based on MSCA Staff Exchange guidelines.

Dissemination & Impact

We aim to raise awareness, communicate results, and create long-term value. Our strategy targets the scientific community, industry stakeholders, and the general public, especially those communities affected by mosquito-borne diseases.

Open access publications and conference participation.

Training sessions in bioinformatics.

Engagement via public events and educational material.

Tools and results shared to strengthen our understanding of mosquito mating behaviour, and to contribute with innovative vector control solutions.

Work Packages

CONTACT

Project Coordination Office: CSIC – (Spain)