PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Stopping the worm from turning

2013-06-04
(Press-News.org) Despite the clear arguments for controlling parasitic infections, we know surprisingly little about the developmental processes in parasitic nematodes. A good model system for research is provided by Oesophagostomum dentatum, a roundworm which infects the large intestines of pigs, slowing the animals' growth and leading to significant economic losses. A number of chemicals are available to help keep the parasite in check but the worms are growing increasingly resistant to their use and so there is a substantial need for new methods of treatment.

From eggs to parasites The worm, Oesophagostomum dentatum, has a fairly simple life cycle. Eggs appear in the faeces around 3 weeks after ingestion of third-stage larvae, the so called L3 stage larvae. In the first two developmental stages, the larvae are not infective. The third-stage larvae migrate from the faeces into the surroundings, where they can again be ingested by pigs. When the parasite reaches the large intestine, the third-stage larvae burrow into the mucosal layer of the intestinal wall and moult to fourth-stage larvae. After a further 6-17 days they emerge from the mucosa and undergo a final moult before they mature into adults and reproduce.

Drug screen on worm proteins Together with colleagues in Australia and the USA, Martina Ondrovics in the group of Anja Joachim at the University of Veterinary Medicine, Vienna (Vetmeduni) has undertaken a detailed in vitro investigation of the proteins involved in the transition from third-stage to fourth-stage larvae. The researchers employed an integrative approach that combined in vitro drug testing with proteomic and bioinformatic analysis. Previous work had identified a number of enzymes (hydrolases) that are likely to have a role in parasite development. Ondrovics used sophisticated techniques to examine the effects of certain compounds (enzyme inhibitors) on the larval protein composition.

Searching for functionality Four of the seven enzyme inhibitors she tested were found to inhibit the development of L3 larvae. The inhibitors also caused substantial alterations in the amounts of certain proteins in the larvae. Ondrovics found that 22 proteins were expressed at significantly different levels. Although no functions could be assigned to three of the proteins, bioinformatics analysis suggested that the remainder are involved in a wide range of biological processes, including reproduction, cellular metabolic processes, multicellular organismal growth, developmental processes, growth, locomotion, response to stimuli, localization and biological regulation. It seems that the activities of these proteins are increased at the L3 to L4 transition, so the proteins are likely to have key functions at this time.

Designing new weapons against parasites A better understanding of key developmental processes could enable new strategies to control parasitic nematodes based on the disruption of key biological pathways. The work at the Vetmeduni thus paves the way for future research to develop drugs that act specifically against parasitic nematodes. As Ondrovics says, "We urgently need new targets for intervention: the worms are rapidly becoming resistant to all the weapons at our disposal. The proteins we identified seem to be involved in fundamental developmental processes and we hope that functional studies will show that some of them are ideal candidate targets for the design of new and selective inhibitors."

### The paper Proteomic analysis of Oesophagostomum dentatum (Nematoda) during larval transition, and the effects of hydrolase inhibitors on development by Martina Ondrovics, Katja Silbermayr, Makedonka Mitreva, Neil D. Young, Ebrahim Razzazi-Fazeli, Robin B. Gasser and Anja Joachim has just been published in PLoS ONE and is available online: http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0063955

About the University of Veterinary Medicine, Vienna

The University of Veterinary Medicine, Vienna is the only academic and research institution in Austria that focuses on veterinary sciences. About 1000 employees and 2300 students work on the campus in the north of Vienna, which also houses the animal hospital and various spin-off-companies. http://www.vetmeduni.ac.at

Scientific contact: Martina Ondrovics
Institute of Parasitology
University of Veterinary Medicine, Vienna
martina.ondrovics@vetmeduni.ac.at
+43 1 25077-2218

Distributed by: Heike Hochhauser
Public Relations
University of Veterinary Medicine, Vienna
heike.hochhauser@vetmeduni.ac.at
+43 1 25077-1002


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

A new species of yellow slug moth from China

2013-06-04
The moth genus Monema is represented by medium-sized yellowish species. The genus belongs to the Limacodidae family also known as the slug moths due to the distinct resemblance of their caterpillars to some slug species. Some people know this family as the cup moths, the name derived from the peculiar looking, hard shell cocoon they form. A recent study of the representatives of the Monema genus in China records 4 species and a subspecies present in the country, one of which is newly described to science. The new species has the characteristic yellow coloration for ...

Quantum model helps solve mysteries of water

2013-06-04
A research team from the National Physical Laboratory (NPL), the University of Edinburgh and IBM's TJ Watson Research Center has revealed a major breakthrough in the modelling of water that could shed light on its mysterious properties. Water is one of the most common and extensively studied substances on earth. It is vital for all known forms of life but its unique behaviour has yet to be explained in terms of the properties of individual molecules. Water derives many of its signature features from a combination of properties at the molecular level such as high polarizability, ...

Organic chemistry -- leading light waves astray

2013-06-04
The development of structured synthetic materials with unusual electromagnetic properties, so-called metamaterials, promises to provide access to special physical effects of great technological interest. Metamaterials have already been fabricated that have a negative refractive index for electromagnetic waves – bending them in the opposite sense to light waves entering water, for instance – which opens up completely novel opportunities for the manipulation of light. One of these makes it possible, in principle, to create cloaking devices that seem to make objects disappear. ...

Microbubbles point the way to a revolution in food processing

2013-06-04
Researchers at the University of Sheffield have found a more efficient way to dry products for food manufacture, using tiny, hot bubbles. Instead of boiling a product to evaporate water - the most common technique used by industry - the Sheffield team injected hot microbubbles through the liquid, causing the water to evaporate without boiling. Professor Will Zimmerman, who led the study, explains: "We've applied this principle, called 'cold boiling' to separate water from methanol. Although conventional bubbles have been used in evaporation processes before, they still ...

Innate immunity

2013-06-04
In animal cells, DNA molecules are normally restricted to the cell nucleus and the mitochondria. When DNA appears outside these organelles – in the so-called cytosol - it most probably originates from a bacterial pathogen or a DNA virus. This is why cytosolic DNA triggers a strong response by the innate immune system. However, various types of insult can also lead to the release into the cytosol of the cell's own DNA. In this case, the resulting immune response may precipitate an autoimmune disease. The innate immune system is the body's first line of defense against ...

Australian lake untouched by climate change

2013-06-04
Researchers at the University of Adelaide have found that a lake on an island off the coast of Queensland, Australia, has been relatively untouched by changes in climate for the past 7000 years, and has so far also resisted the impact of humans. Blue Lake, one of the largest lakes on North Stradbroke Island, southeast of Brisbane, has been the focus of research examining the lake's response to environmental change over time. Researchers studied the lake's water discharge, water quality and comparisons of historical photos over the past 117 years, as well as fossil pollen ...

The science of yellow snow

2013-06-04
New research from wildlife ecologists at Michigan Technological University indicates that white-tailed deer may be making the soil in their preferred winter homes unfit to grow the very trees that protect them there. Bryan Murray, a PhD candidate at Michigan Tech, and two faculty members, Professor Christopher Webster and Assistant Professor Joseph Bump, studied the effects on soil of the nitrogen-rich waste that white-tailed deer leave among stands of eastern hemlock, which are among their favorite wintering grounds in the harsh, snowy climate of northern Michigan. ...

Why innovation thrives in cities

2013-06-04
CAMBRIDGE, MA -- In 2010, in the journal Nature, a pair of physicists at the Santa Fe Institute showed that when the population of a city doubles, economic productivity goes up by an average of 130 percent. Not only does total productivity increase with increased population, but so does per-capita productivity. In the latest issue of Nature Communications, researchers from the MIT Media Laboratory's Human Dynamics Lab propose a new explanation for that "superlinear scaling": Increases in urban population density give residents greater opportunity for face-to-face interaction. The ...

Cheerful women are not associated with leadership qualities -- but proud ones are

2013-06-04
To increase their share of leadership positions, women are expected to tick a range of boxes – usually demonstrating improved negotiation skills, networking strengths and the ability to develop a strategic career ladder. "But even these skills are not enough," maintains Professor Isabell Welpe of TUM's Chair for Strategy and Organization. "They ignore the fact that there are stereotypes that on a subconscious level play a decisive role in the assessment of high achievers. Leaders should be assertive, dominant and hard-lined; women are seen as mediators, friendly, social." Economic ...

Never forget a face? Researchers find women have better memory recall than men

2013-06-04
New research from McMaster University suggests women can remember faces better than men, in part because they spend more time studying features without even knowing it, and a technique researchers say can help improve anyone's memories. The findings help to answer long-standing questions about why some people can remember faces easily while others quickly forget someone they've just met. "The way we move our eyes across a new individual's face affects our ability to recognize that individual later," explains Jennifer Heisz, a research fellow at the Rotman Institute ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Novel photochromic glass can store rewritable 3D patterns

Sea sponge inspires super strong compressible material

AI generates playful, human-like games

Bacteria ‘leaking across stomach lining’ could indicate risk of gastric cancer, new study has found

Feeding anemone: Symbiote fish actively feed hosts in wild

New AI-powered tool could enhance traumatic brain injury investigations in forensics and law enforcement

A protein from tiny tardigrades may help cancer patients tolerate radiation therapy

Double network hydrogel polymers with rapid self-strengthening abilities

Schizophrenia is reflected in the brain structure

Researchers warn continuous glucose monitors can overestimate blood sugar levels

Colorectal cancer: Lipids can predict treatment efficacy

Physical activity boosts mental health in women with chronic pelvic pain disorders

New method searches through 10 sextillion drug molecules

Breakthrough in the development of a new low-cost computer

New computer model can predict the length of a household's displacement in any U.S. community after a disaster

At your service: How older adults embrace demand-responsive transportation

Enhancing lithium-ion battery performance with roll-to-roll compatible flash process technology

Simulating scientists: New tool for AI-powered scientific discovery

Helium in the Earth's core

Study: First female runner could soon break the 4-minute-mile barrier

High dietary fish intake may slow disability progression in MS

UK Armed Forces servicewomen face unique set of hurdles for abortion access/care

Use of strong synthetic opioids during surgery linked to poor composite experience of pain

UK innovation to transform treatment for people with type 2 diabetes worldwide

AI model can read ECGs to identify female patients at higher risk of heart disease

Biological organ ages predict disease risk decades in advance

New manzanita species discovered, already at risk

Giant ice bulldozers: How ancient glaciers helped life evolve

Toward high electro-optic performance in III-V semiconductors

In mouse embryos, sister cells commit suicide in unison

[Press-News.org] Stopping the worm from turning