logo
Dundee's parasite-busting breakthrough could save billions

Dundee's parasite-busting breakthrough could save billions

Worm infestations cost the European livestock sector approximately £1.8 billion annually. Despite the significant impact that parasitic worms have on the economy, there is currently no vaccination for humans, and progress in protecting animals has been limited.
However, the Dundee team has discovered a way to turn the parasites' primary weapon against them.
New research from Dundee has shown how to turn a parasitic worm's harmful proteins against itself. (Image: University of Dundee)
New research discovered that the worms create proteins, including two known as HpARI and HpBARI. These proteins suppress the host's immune response, effectively blocking the host's immune system from reacting to and fighting off the worm's harmful effects.
This often allows the infection to develop into a chronic problem, resulting in long-term effects that are much harder to mitigate.
Once infected, human hosts can experience diarrhoea, nausea, vomiting, and abdominal pains. Children are particularly vulnerable to the effects of worm infection, with an increased risk of growth stunting and malnutrition.
Dr Henry McSorley and his fellow researchers believe their breakthrough could have significant benefits for humans and livestock. (Image: University of Dundee)
Dundee researchers led by Dr Henry McSorley, lead author in the division of Cell Signalling and Immunology at Dundee's School of Life Sciences, have found a way to vaccinate mice with the same HpARI and HpBARI that the worms produce.
This has allowed the hosts to increase their immune system's response to the typically harmful proteins and block their effects.
The result is to nullify the parasite and give time for the immune system to clear the infection fully.
Scientists have long known that parasitic worms protect themselves by suppressing the immune system of their hosts; however, scientists are only now beginning to understand how this process works.
In addition to their use as vaccines, parasite proteins such as HpARI and HpBARI have garnered interest as potential new treatments for human diseases characterised by an overactive immune system, including allergies and asthma.
Dr McSorley said that the team's breakthrough is an essential step in eradicating the threat of parasitic worms.
'Our work has revealed that HpARI or HpBARI proteins are effective in mitigating the effects of infection in hosts. Further research will be required to identify similar proteins from parasites of humans and livestock.
"These results are incredibly positive and could form the basis of a future vaccination that could protect humans against worm infection.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A genetic test could predict the odds of obesity, allowing for early interventions
A genetic test could predict the odds of obesity, allowing for early interventions

NBC News

time12 hours ago

  • NBC News

A genetic test could predict the odds of obesity, allowing for early interventions

A genetic test may one day predict a child's risk of obesity in adulthood, paving the way for early interventions. Certain genetic variants can affect how a person's body stores fat or make them more prone to overeating. Genetic variation can also predict how well a person will respond to different weight loss drugs. In a study published Monday in the journal Nature Medicine, more than 600 researchers from around the world worked together to compile genetic data from more than 5 million people — the largest and most diverse genetic dataset to date. They also used genetic data from 23andMe. From the dataset, the researchers were able to create what's known as a polygenic risk score, which takes into account which genetic variants a person has that have been linked to a higher BMI in adulthood. The score, the researchers said, could be used to predict a person's risk of obesity as an adult — before they even turn 5. 'Childhood is the best time to intervene,' said study co-author Ruth Loos, a professor at the University of Copenhagen's Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Basic Metabolic Research. (Research conducted at the center is not influenced by drugmaker Novo Nordisk, though some of the study authors had ties to pharmaceutical companies that make weight loss drugs.) The findings come as obesity is rising around the world. Rates of obesity in adults have more than doubled globally since 1990, and adolescent rates have quadrupled, according to the World Health Organization. About 16% of adults worldwide have obesity and the situation is worse in the United States, where more than 40% of adults have obesity, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention statistics show. Twice as effective The new test is not the first that predicts a person's risk of obesity, but Loos and her team showed it was about twice as effective as the method doctors currently use to assess their patients. That polygenetic score can account for about 8.5% of a person's risk for having a high BMI as an adult. The new score increased that to about 17.6%, at least in people with European ancestry. 'That's a pretty powerful risk indicator for obesity, but it still leaves open a lot that is unknown,' said Dr. Roy Kim, a pediatric endocrinologist at Cleveland Clinic Children's who was not involved with the research. Based on this score, more than 80% of a person's risk for obesity can be explained by other factors, such as where they live, what kinds of foods they have access to, and how much they exercise. The test was not nearly as effective in predicting obesity risk in non-Europeans. It explained about 16% of the risk for having a high BMI in East Asian Americans, but just 2.2% in rural Ugandans. About 70% of people whose data was included in the study were of predominantly European ancestry. About 14% were Hispanic and typically had a mix of ancestries. About 8% were of predominantly East Asian descent and just under 5% were of predominantly African ancestry. These samples were predominantly from African American people, who largely had mixed ancestry. Just 1.5% were of predominantly South Asian ancestry. Loos said the new score is a big step forward, but that it's still a prototype. The next step is to collect more — and more diverse — data on people with African ancestry in particular to improve how well the score works for everyone, not just white people. She said the score could offer one indicator — what high blood pressure is to heart disease, for example — that could help predict a person's risk of developing obesity. 'Obesity is not only about genetics, so genetics alone can never accurately predict obesity,' Loos said. 'For the general obesity that we see all over the world, we need other factors such as lifestyle that need to be part of the predictions.' Genetics play a bigger role in severe obesity, meaning a BMI of more than 40, she added. Still, identifying a person's genetic risk early on in childhood and intervening early with lifestyle coaching could make a big difference, she said. Research has shown that about 55% of children with obesity go on to have obesity in adolescence, and that about 80% of those individuals will have obesity in adulthood. 'Behavioral things are really important,' Kim said. 'Their environment, their access to healthy food, exercise opportunities, even their knowledge about healthy foods all affect a person's obesity risk.' How important are genetics, really? Although studies in identical twins have found that genetics can account for as much as 80% of the reason a person has obesity, lifestyle factors still play a huge role, Kim said. 'Even with the same genetic makeup, people can have different body types,' he said. 'From a very young age in my practice, we educate patients about the importance of eating protein-rich foods, a lot of fruits and vegetables and not too many refined carbs.' Dr. Juliana Simonetti, co-director of the Comprehensive Weight Management Program at the University of Utah, has been using genetic testing in her adult patients for about five years. She said understanding a person's genes can help doctors better treat weight gain. 'Obesity is not homogeneous. We have different kinds and different presentations,' said Simonetti, who wasn't involved with the new study. Simonetti uses a person's genes to determine if a patient struggles with satiety, or feeling full. 'They eat but do not feel full,' Simonetti said, adding that this is a disorder caused by genetic mutations affecting certain pathways in the body. People who have these mutations 'tend to have higher weight,' she said. But such mutations do not tell the whole genetic story of obesity, Simonetti said. The genes that a person inherits from either parent, even if they are not mutations, also determine how a person's body stores weight or uses energy. Both can play a big role in obesity risk. Genetic testing is also starting to be able to determine how well certain weight loss drugs will work for a person, Simonetti said, but she added this is just the beginning. 'We are talking about three out of 80 mutations that we can treat,' she said. 'We are getting better, and the more data we have, I'm hopeful that we are going to do a better job in being more precise in understanding treatment responses.'

The Narrow Road to the Deep North: the tragic true story of the Burma Railway
The Narrow Road to the Deep North: the tragic true story of the Burma Railway

Evening Standard

time3 days ago

  • Evening Standard

The Narrow Road to the Deep North: the tragic true story of the Burma Railway

Many European and US doctors who had been captured had little experience of treating tropical diseases, while Dutch ones did – and Dutch soldiers correspondingly suffered from a lower death toll than their fellows. The treatment the workers had at the hands of their Japanese captors was also infamously brutal – the bridge over the river Khwae and the Hellfire Pass were built by prisoners of war, often working without the correct tools.

Drilling Antarctica: What ice can tell us about our past and the future
Drilling Antarctica: What ice can tell us about our past and the future

ITV News

time4 days ago

  • ITV News

Drilling Antarctica: What ice can tell us about our past and the future

The oldest ice core ever to be drilled has arrived in the UK for scientists to start analysing, as ITV News Science Correspondent Martin Stew reports Words by ITV News Senior Producer, Rhiannon Hopley In the freezing temperatures of Antarctica, the nearly 3km thick ice contains a perfectly preserved record of our planet's history. As part of an ambitious project to unlock these secrets, European scientists have drilled down into the ice and extracted a core which is 2.8km long. This long core has been pulled out from the middle of the Antarctic ice sheet and scientists think the deepest part could be more than 1.5million years old. To get it out, scientists had to bore down carefully, pulling the ice out bit by bit on spring loaders as the hole is filled with a liquid so it does not refreeze. The ice core has been split into parts and sent to labs across Europe including the British Antarctic Survey in Cambridge. Scientists will melt the ice and analyse its contents, with the results expected to give us new information about Earth's history. That's because tiny bubbles of air locked inside the ice have been frozen in time. The bubbles in the younger ice are bigger, but in the older ice, the bubbles have been squeezed down for such a long time that it looks like glass. Ice Core Drilling Engineer, James Veale explained: "When you get this deep, the pressure from the ice is so great, those air bubbles get smaller and smaller and compressed until you get to the very bottom and you can't see them at all." Some of these bubbles have been trapped in stasis for over a million years. They are so old that these tiny bits of perfectly preserved air would have been breathed in by giant mammoths when they roamed the Earth. The scientists melt the cores and run them through machines, looking for three main things: how much carbon dioxide was in the atmosphere at the time, the temperature and any impurities in the ice. In the ice core, impurities can show when there have been volcanic eruptions or other big historical events, including the atomic bombs dropped on Japan. In fact it is so accurate, scientists can see the start of the industrial revolution and even the moment that lead was taken out of petrol. The last long ice core to be drilled out went back 800,000 years. It helped map out how the earth's temperature and carbon cycles have fluctuated. Head of ice core research at British Antarctic Survey, Dr Liz Thomas, and her team will be slowly melting the ice for 15 hours a day for the next seven weeks so they can analyse the gases in the ice. The Earth does fluctuate between ice ages and higher temperature eras, but the ice core has revealed that there has never been this much CO2 put into the atmosphere this quickly in the entire 800,000 year record. With the new core, scientists will be able to nearly double the length of current records. It is hoped it will reveal new data to explain why the Earth's temperature cycle changed from ice ages every 40,000 years to every 100,000 years. It will also provise more evidence for how carbon dioxide levels affect our planet's temperature and conditions as looking this far back into the past may just help reveal our future.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store