Science Malaria 'completely stopped' by microbe - Malaria no longer trendy, time to wipe it out.

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Scientists have discovered a microbe that completely protects mosquitoes from being infected with malaria.

The team in Kenya and the UK say the finding has "enormous potential" to control the disease.

Malaria is spread by the bite of infected mosquitoes, so protecting them could in turn protect people.

The researchers are now investigating whether they can release infected mosquitoes into the wild, or use spores to suppress the disease.

What is this microbe?
The malaria-blocking bug, Microsporidia MB, was discovered by studying mosquitoes on the shores of Lake Victoria in Kenya. It lives in the gut and genitals of the insects.

The researchers could not find a single mosquito carrying the Microsporidia that was harbouring the malaria parasite. And lab experiments, published in Nature Communications, confirmed the microbe gave the mosquitoes protection.

Microsporidias are fungi, or at least closely related to them, and most are parasites.

However, this new species may be beneficial to the mosquito and was naturally found in around 5% of the insects studied.

How big a discovery is it?
"The data we have so far suggest it is 100% blockage, it's a very severe blockage of malaria," Dr Jeremy Herren, from the International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology (icipe) in Kenya told the BBC.

He added: "It will come as a quite a surprise. I think people will find that a real big breakthrough."

More than 400,000 people are killed by malaria each year, most of them children under the age of five.

While huge progress has been made through the use of bed nets and spraying homes with insecticide, this has stalled in recent years. It is widely agreed new tools are needed to tackle malaria.

Sleeping under a bed net
Image copyrightGETTY IMAGESImage captionBed nets have helped cut the number of people infected with malaria around the worldHow does the microbe stop malaria?
The fine details still need to be worked out.

But Microsporidia MB could be priming the mosquito's immune system, so it is more able to fight off infections.

Or the presence of the microbe in the insect could be having a profound effect on the mosquito's metabolism, making it inhospitable for the malaria parasite.

Microsporidia MB infections appear to be life-long. If anything, the experiments show they become more intense, so the malaria-blocking effect would be long-lasting.

When can this be used against malaria?
At the very least, 40% of mosquitoes in a region need to be infected with Microsporidia in order to make a significant dent in malaria.

The microbe can be passed between adult mosquitoes and is also passed from the female to her offspring.

So, the researchers are investigating two main strategies for increasing the number of infected mosquitoes.

  • Microsporidia form spores which could be released en masse to infect mosquitoes
  • Male mosquitoes (which don't bite) could be infected in the lab and released into the wild to infect the females when they have sex
"It's a new discovery. We are very excited by its potential for malaria control. It has enormous potential," Prof Steven Sinkins, from the MRC-University of Glasgow Centre for Virus Research, told the BBC.

This concept of disease control using microbes is not unprecedented. A type of bacteria called Wolbachia has been shown to make it harder for mosquitoes to spread dengue fever in real-world trials.

What happens next?
The scientists need to understand how the microbe spreads, so they plan to perform more tests in Kenya.

However, these approaches are relatively uncontroversial as the species is already found in wild mosquitoes and is not introducing something new.

It also would not kill the mosquitoes, so would not have an impact on ecosystems that are dependent on them as food. This is part of other strategies like a killer fungus that can almost completely collapse mosquito populations in weeks.
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Good news if true!
 
... she swallowed the spider to catch the fly...

Almost every single time this is tried it ends in disaster. We need better, safer INSECTICIDES. Bed nets are a fraction as effective as spraying the fuck out of areas. Obviously most insecticides are bad news, so let’s make some that aren’t.
The facts that only a minority of insects carry the fungi suggests that a balance has already been reached already and that there may be consequences to infecting more.

Don’t fuck with ecosystems, is the lesson.
 
We need better, safer INSECTICIDES. Bed nets are a fraction as effective as spraying the fuck out of areas. Obviously most insecticides are bad news, so let’s make some that aren’t.
Uh, what? Insecticides are pretty damn safe. Are you one of those people who think this hasn't advanced in the last 70 years since DDT?
Don’t fuck with ecosystems, is the lesson.
That's the whole point of many fields of study. To learn how to fuck with nature. Only the lunatic hippies think we shouldn't learn new pest removal methods.
 
Insecticides are pretty damn safe. Are you one of those people who think this hasn't advanced in the last 70 years since DDT?
Gotta disagree on that one. The problem is often the breakdown products, but quite a few of the common pesticides have effects on human health. They’re often longer term stuff rather than acute toxicity but there’s growing evidence that both pyrethroids and Op type insecticides amd their metabolites can affect thyroid, sperm, the brain and cause endocrine disruption. They aren’t chemicals I’d handle willingly.


That's the whole point of many fields of study. To learn how to fuck with nature. Only the lunatic hippies think we shouldn't learn new pest removal methods.

yeah, I get your point there. We can’t leave nature untouched or we’d be in mud huts dying of dysentery. It’s just that these kinds of smart ideas always seem to actively make things worse, rather than better. Like the cane toads. Or the mongoose. It’s top down control, and nature doesn’t work like that.
I’m now headed down a rabbit hole to find successful examples because there must be some. :D
 
Just what we need, more Octumbas trying to invade the rest of the world. Ever think God came up with Malaria for a reason?
 
Kinda scummy, but are we really sure we want to remove the final barrier for a lot of third world countries to endlessly reproduce?


We are infecting the skeeters with a microbe which may actually be more effective in killing/maiming/generally fucking over/up people. There have been exactly no testing as to what happens when a skeeter infected with this chomps on a person. Really, it's a terrible idea.

So because it's 2020 it's definitely something that's going to happen...

Wait.

What if this is the part where the firstborn children (among many others) die?
 
They’re often longer term stuff rather than acute toxicity but there’s growing evidence that both pyrethroids and Op type insecticides amd their metabolites can affect thyroid, sperm, the brain and cause endocrine disruption. They aren’t chemicals I’d handle willingly.
It's been "growing" since Silent Spring kicked the whole panic off and if anything they have backed off the initial findings. Particularly for Organophosphates. People handle them. For decades. Day in day out. We call them farmers.

If there are effects they are on the margins in the real world and the notable effects seem to be only in the labs.
I’m now headed down a rabbit hole to find successful examples because there must be some. :biggrin:
The entire fields of agriculture, aquaculture, and forestry.
 
- New virus appears and fucks over the world.
- Malaria medication, which is cheap and plentiful, may possibly help against the new disease.
Scientists: Oh, yeah, that reminds me - we just figured out how to eliminate malaria.
 
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