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September 2005 |
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In the time it takes you to read this page, three African children will have died of malaria. The devastation caused by this mosquito-transmitted disease in many areas of the developing world is almost too huge to imagine, stealing a child's life every 30 seconds. "Among infectious diseases, malaria is one of the top three killers worldwide, "says Dyann Wirth. "It's a huge public health problem." Wirth, a geneticist at the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston, Massachusetts, studies malaria and how it spreads. Because of the global scope of the problem, Wirth teams up with scientists in countries faced with the harsh reality of the disease. Ultimately, she wants to transfer what she learns through basic research into practical strategies for managing malaria, wherever it strikes.
New Tricks for an Old Disease Not until just before the turn of the 20th century did researchers identify the true source of malaria. The British physician and entomologist Sir Ronald Ross found evidence of malaria infection inside the egg cells of female mosquitoes carrying certain types of parasites. With more study, scientists eventually confirmed that female Anopheles mosquitoes, which feed on blood to nourish their eggs, spread malaria. Infected mosquitoes pass on the disease as they bite people in search of their next blood meal. Malaria can be tricky to diagnose because its early symptoms resemble those of many other conditions. These include fever, chills, sweating, headaches, muscle pain, nausea, and vomiting— all symptoms that can appear with common viral infections that usually go away by themselves. Left untreated, though, malaria can quickly progress as the parasitic invasion travels to the liver and all over the body, leading to organ damage; severe swelling of the abdomen, eyes, feet, and hands; coma; and death. If malaria is caught early, doctors can treat it with medication. One of the most widely used treatments is a drug called chloroquine, which destroys malaria-causing parasites in the bloodstream. Chloroquine is a synthetic derivative of quinine, a natural chemical isolated in the early 1800s from bark of the cinchona tree (early civilizations called it the “fever tree”). When researchers learned how to make chloroquine around the time of World War II, they heralded this discovery as a major victory for public health. Today, though, public health officials face a substantially gloomier outlook. Parasites quickly develop ways to outwit drugs, allowing the disease to spread. “When it comes to malaria, the single most important problem is the [lack of] effectiveness of drugs in the Third World,” says Wirth. Although malaria strikes mostly in developing countries, it is not just someone else’s problem. World travelers can play an unsuspecting role in spreading infectious diseases. If you take a trip overseas and come into contact with an infected mosquito, you’re at risk for getting, and spreading, malaria. The relative ease of global travel makes our world an ever smaller place, and mosquitoes don't care who they bite.
Seeds of Science She grew up in the midwestern town of Racine, Wisconsin. Neither of Wirth's parents were scientists, yet she remembers an early fascination with the natural world. The first toy Wirth ever specifically asked for was a microscope, when she was about 8 years old. "It's true!" she admits. Even though Wirth attended a relatively small grade school that didn't have a lot of resources or high-tech scientific gadgets, she clearly recalls a feeling of excitement about science. Every few months, shipments of new supplies for science class showed up, and she couldn't wait for her teacher to unpack them. "My very favorite elementary school memories were investigating the contents of those huge steamer trunks, which had tons of goodies for learning about biology, astronomy, geology, you name it," says Wirth. Exploring the trunk contents gave her great satisfaction, nurturing what became a lifelong interest in many different areas of science. Later, Wirth was lucky to find summer research programs for high school and college students. She enjoyed the experiences so much, she knew science would be a permanent part of her life. “I can’t imagine not thinking about science,” she says. Wirth’s inquisitive nature has not faded with time. But as she grew into adulthood, she felt a pressing need to connect science with society. The mindset stuck. “I feel very strongly that scientists have an obligation to help get their discoveries translated into treatments,” she says. On her own time, Wirth works with international groups such as the World Health Organization and Doctors Without Borders. Through these alliances, Wirth hopes to advance the development of treatments for tropical diseases, in spite of the modest financial incentive they offer to drug companies.
Parasite Secrets As Wirth explains, Plasmodia and other parasitic protozoans (the word means single-celled animal) do something else very unusual: They live within other cells. Think about it, says Wirth. That’s an entire, eukaryotic (nucleus-containing) cell living inside another eukaryotic cell that’s not a whole lot bigger than itself. Despite this sizing challenge, parasitic protozoans can deftly maneuver inside different cell types and infect different parts of the body. As a class of organisms, parasitic protozoans harm humans and other forms of life in many ways. For example, one such parasite, Giardia lamblia, can settle into the cells of your small intestine if you drink unfiltered stream water. Even crystal-clear, icy-cold water can be contaminated with small amounts of fecal matter that contains Giardia-infected intestinal cells. A Giardia infection can give you diarrhea and vomiting that lasts for days. Toxoplasma gondii is another example of a single-celled parasite that can be harmful to people. This organism finds its way into the intestines of cats, which can pass on the disease to people through cat feces containing cells with Toxoplasma living inside. Many people who are infected have no symptoms or may feel like they have the flu. Unborn babies and people with weak immune systems, however, can develop serious eye or brain damage. Of the four species of the Plasmodium parasite that cause malaria in humans, a variety called Plasmodium falciparum is the most widespread and dangerous, accounting for 80 percent of all human malarial infections and 90 percent of deaths. Yet despite the impact of these tiny organisms on public health, scientists still don’t know most of the details about how Plasmodia and other parasitic protozoans damage the body. What happens to a Plasmodium parasite once it gets into a red blood cell, then the liver? What does it do inside the gut of a mosquito? What about the mosquito? Is it changed by a parasitic interaction? Do red blood cells hold secrets of past encounters with Plasmodia or other parasites? Exactly how does the human immune system react to the parasite? These and many other mysteries of parasite biology remain unsolved. But, according to Wirth, knowing the answers is absolutely critical for understanding and treating malaria and other diseases caused by parasites.
DNA Shows the Way The biological survival process works like this. When a constraint of any kind is put on an ecosystem, all species within the system feel pressure to find a way around it in order to survive. The ones that are best at adapting “win,” and live. The others, unable to change, die off. This is evolution at work. In the case of antimalarial drugs, only those parasites that have the molecular tools to fight off our medicines can survive and make more of themselves. Through evolutionary change, the molecular features that give a survival advantage are passed on to offspring. Over time, these features show up as DNA signatures: particular, recognizable genetic sequences. Wirth’s main focus is on DNA. As a geneticist, she studies inheritance, the process of transmitting genetic information from one generation to the next. DNA carries genetic information in creatures as varied as earthworms, sunflowers, people—and of course, in parasites like Plasmodium. You might think of it this way: Each organ-ism’s genome, or its entire set of genes, is like a molecular scrapbook that chronicles events happening over time. Millions of these events occur. A parasite’s interactions with the human immune system ... its encounters with the body chemistry of a mosquito ... run-ins with antimalarial medicines ... and so on. All these interactions leave traces in DNA. Evolution leaves its marks within genes, through slight changes, additions, and subtractions of DNA building blocks, or nucleotides. But the tricky part is that the scrapbook comes without captions. There’s nothing indicating what’s what. No tags saying, “DNA changed by chloroquine, September 10, 2005,” or, “Anopheles, Argentina, summer 2001.” Rather, scientists like Wirth compare DNA sequences of the resistant parasites with those that still respond to drugs. They focus on regions of sequences thought to be involved in drug resistance, as suggested by earlier lab work. "We look across populations of parasite genomes and ask a very simple question: Where are the differences?" Wirth explains. In genetic-speak,researchers call those differences polymorphisms.When a genetic change affects a single DNA nucleotide, the change is known as a single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP, pronounced "snip"). Wirth and her international research team are currently scanning the DNA of several Plasmodium chromosomes in search of SNPs, or patterns of SNPs called haplotypes, that spell drug resistance in the genetic language of parasites. Since the scientists must compare millions of DNA nucleotides from hundreds of samples, they let a computer equipped with specialized software do the grunt work. Certain recurring SNPs that the computer identifies become promising targets for designing vaccines or creating new drugs.
Team Science One interesting observation that Wirth and her team have made is that human activity, such as commerce, can help spread mosquito populations and drug resistance. For example, standing water in irrigation ditches or old construction sites can create breeding sites for mosquito larvae. In other words, the things people do can propagate malaria and the drug resistance that goes along with it. Through her studies, Wirth and her coworkers have been surprised and alarmed to observe the spread of resistance across extremely wide geographic areas. An overarching goal of Wirth's research is to use genetic testing to develop an early warning system to detect when malaria drugs aren't working, allowing time to try different approaches. For example, a mixture of different drugs can minimize the development of resistance, says Wirth. The global significance of Wirth's efforts may seem obvious. Yet she's quick to note that progress wouldn't have been possible without somebody digging around asking basic questions. Among other things, her experiments have helped guide the search for genetic signatures of antimalarial drug resistance among the 24 million nucleotides that make up the Plasmodium genome. Without the fundamental groundwork, Wirth emphasizes, “We wouldn’t even know where to look.”
A Magical Time In a similar vein to the approach Wirth is pursuing, other scientists scan the genomes of people to find small differences that may foretell our health. The scientific methods Wirth and her coworkers use are the very same techniques used by researchers looking for hereditary links to breast cancer, heart disease, depression, and many other disorders. This scientific pursuit helps us paint a picture of the past and plan for the future. Learning how an organism’s biology and behavior change over time is even helping scientists create predictive models for responding to disease outbreaks (see sidebar, The MIDAS Touch). Now that researchers have access to the sequences of many parasite genomes, it is fairly easy for scientists like Wirth to look broadly at parasite DNA and compare it with that of other organisms. Vast scientific horizons, like the uncharted galaxies once facing early astronomers, lie ahead. As with planet hunters, today’s biologists explore genome space, searching for yet-undiscovered patterns—biological constellations, perhaps—hiding in an organism’s genome. The information will most surely have ripple effects, extending our understanding of the larger universe of human health and disease. Wirth predicts that as technology races forward, new tools will fuel rapid growth in fundamental knowledge. This, she says, is the raw material needed to stop infectious diseases in their tracks and improve global health. “I think this is a magical time for discovery, for really making a difference,” Wirth says. |
Download free slide kit Powerpoint | PDF | Accessible Format
Photo: Rick Friedman
Photo: CDC/ James Gathany
Photo: CDC
Photo: Dyann Wirth
Photo: WHO/UNICEF. World Malaria Report 2005, Geneva, May 3, 2005
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