Breakthrough
claimed in research on leishmaniasis
Mike Shanahan
23 July 2004
Source: SciDev.Net
Scientists are claiming to have achieved a major step in in the battle
against leishmaniasis, a potentially fatal disease affecting about
12 million people, largely in the tropics and subtropics.
The
researchers say they have discovered the mechanism by which parasites
are transmitted when a sand fly bites. Their results also reveal
the number of parasites transmitted, and the role of a chemical
that accompanies the parasites when they are transmitted.
Leishmaniasis
is caused by a microscopic parasite similar to the one that causes
malaria and is transmitted to humans by bites from sand flies. Three
forms the disease occur, one affecting internal organs, one causing
skin ulcers, and one causing the membranes of the nose and mouth
to erode away.
Describing
their findings as "a new picture" of the way the disease
is transmitted, the researchers say that their work has important
implications for understanding the pathology of the disease, and
for the development of drugs and vaccines against the parasite.
The
study, published in this week's Nature, reveals that the average
sand fly bite can deliver more than 1,000 parasites, the majority
of which are at the stage in their life cycle when they are capable
of causing infection.
By
counting parasites in different parts of the sand flies' digestive
tract, the researchers have shown that the flies "actively
regurgitate" the parasite when they bite. But the researchers
also showed that the sand fly does more than just inject the parasite.
Mice
receiving a single infectious sand fly bite developed more severe
skin lesions faster than those injected with 1,000 infective parasites
from a syringe. This suggested that something else — dubbed
an 'exacerbation factor' — was transmitted along with the
parasites.
The
exacerbation factor is in fact the main component of a gel released
by the parasites while they are inside sand flies. The gel is known
to block the sand fly gut, causing it to feed more often and for
longer, which increases the chance of parasite transmission. Its
additional role in enhancing infectivity, however, was unknown until
now.
"This
is an excellent example of collaborative research bringing together
biology and chemistry to unravel key questions, in this case the
mechanism of disease transmission in Leishmaniasis," says Mike
Ferguson, one of the authors of the study.
The
research shows how the parasite has evolved the production of a
chemical that functions both in the insect that transmits it and
in its mammalian host. This, say the researchers, highlights the
importance of studying all three organisms simultaneously.
The
study was carried out by a collaborative team from the Liverpool
School of Tropical Medicine in the United Kingdom, the Max-Planck-Institut
f?r Biologie in Germany, and the Wellcome Trust Biocentre at the
University of Dundee.
Link
to full paper by Rogers et al in Nature
Reference: Nature 430, 463, (2004)
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