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

The human parasite Leishmania is a probiotic for the fly that carries it

The human parasite Leishmania is a probiotic for the fly that carries it
2014-07-23
(Press-News.org) The Leishmania parasite, which causes the human disease leishmaniasis, acts as a probiotic in the insect that transmits it to humans, protecting them from bacterial disease. Findings published in the open access journal Parasites and Vectors suggest that using bacterial controls to stop the spread of leishmaniasis could sometimes have the opposite effect to that intended, by benefiting flies carrying the parasite.

Around 12 million people are currently infected with leishmaniasis worldwide, mostly in South America, Africa and Asia. It is estimated to kill 20-50,000 people per year. Sandflies transmit the parasite by feeding on an infected mammal and, if they survive long enough, feeding on another mammal, and passing the parasite on to them.

A team from Lancaster University were studying sandflies' interactions with bacteria, to find a new way to control the sandfly populations, and curb the spread of leishmaniasis. They set out to study the effects on the sandfly of carrying both the Leishmania parasite and the bacterial pathogen Serratia marcescens, a naturally occurring disease in sandfly populations.

The team took a population of Lutzomyia longipalpis sandflies and fed them blood meal containing the Leishmania parasite, and a second group with uninfected blood meal. They then fed both groups with the Serratia pathogen. The group that were carrying the Leishmania parasite had a survival rate of 56% after six days, in contrast to the control group, which had a survival rate of just 11%. This showed that carrying both the Leishmania parasite and the bacterial pathogen protected the flies and increased their lifespan.

The authors say that this finding is important for efforts to develop biological controls against vectors of disease using bacterial pathogens, as these may have unexpected effects in the wild.

Dr Rod Dillon said: "We're looking at using bacteria to stop the spread of leishmaniasis, but it turns out that the Leishmania parasite works as a kind of probiotic and reduces the mortality of the fly."

INFORMATION:

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
The human parasite Leishmania is a probiotic for the fly that carries it

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Stress can make hard-working mongooses less likely to help in the future

Stress can make hard-working mongooses less likely to help in the future
2014-07-23
Researchers studying banded mongooses in Uganda have discovered that those who work hard to care for pups may be less likely to invest in future offspring in the same way due to elevated stress hormones. Dr Jennifer Sanderson, from the University of Exeter, has been observing wild banded mongooses to understand why working hard makes them less likely to work hard in the future. She discovered that when a banded mongoose invests heavily to care for mongoose pups, it experiences an increase in circulating stress hormones (or 'glucocorticoids'), and these high stress ...

New model helps explain how provisions promote or reduce wildlife disease

2014-07-23
Athens, Ga. – Scientists have long known that providing supplemental food for wildlife, or resource provisioning, can sometimes cause more harm than good. University of Georgia ecologists have developed a new mathematical model to tease apart the processes that help explain why. Their research, which has implications for public health and wildlife conservation, appears in the Royal Society journal Biology Letters. Wildlife of many kinds are increasingly finding their meals in human environments, gathering at places like backyard bird feeders, landfills or farms that offer ...

In asthma, it's not just what you smell, but what you think you smell

2014-07-22
PHILADELPHIA (July 22, 2014) – New research from the Monell Center reveals that simply believing that an odor is potentially harmful can increase airway inflammation in asthmatics for at least 24 hours following exposure. The findings highlight the role that expectations can play in health-related outcomes. "Asthmatics often are anxious about scents and fragrances. When we expect that an odor is harmful, our bodies react as if that odor is indeed harmful," said study lead author Cristina Jaén, PhD, a Monell physiologist. "Both patients and care providers need to understand ...

The dopamine transporter

The dopamine transporter
2014-07-22
Recent published research in the Journal of Clinical Investigation demonstrates how changes in dopamine signaling and dopamine transporter function are linked to neurological and psychiatric diseases, including early-onset Parkinsonism and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). "The present findings should provide a critical basis for further exploration of how dopamine dysfunction and altered dopamine transporter function contribute to brain disorders" said Michelle Sahai, a postdoctoral associate at the Weill Cornell Medical College of Cornell University, ...

Alaska frogs reach record lows in extreme temperature survival

Alaska frogs reach record lows in extreme temperature survival
2014-07-22
Freezing and thawing might not be good for the average steak, but it seems to help wood frogs each fall as they prepare to survive Alaska's winter cold. "Alaska wood frogs spend more time freezing and thawing outside than a steak does in your freezer and the frog comes back to life in the spring in better shape than the steak," said Don Larson, University of Alaska Fairbanks graduate student and lead author on a recent paper demonstrating that freeze tolerance in Alaska wood frogs is more extreme than previously thought. Although wood frogs are well-studied freeze-tolerant ...

Study examines presence of uterine cancers at the time of hysterectomy using morcellation

2014-07-22
Among women undergoing a minimally invasive hysterectomy using electric power morcellation, uterine cancers were present in 27 per 10,000 women at the time of the procedure, according to a study published by JAMA. There has been concern that this procedure, in which the uterus is fragmented into smaller pieces, may result in the spread of undetected malignancies. Despite the commercial availability of electric power morcellators for 2 decades, accurate estimates of the prevalence of malignancy at the time of electric power morcellation (in this study referred to as morcellation) ...

The 92 percent clean plate club

The 92 percent clean plate club
2014-07-22
If you're a member of the Clean Plate Club – you eat pretty much everything you put on your plate – you're not alone! A new Cornell University study shows that the average adult eats 92% of whatever he or she puts on his or her plate. "If you put it on your plate, it's going into your stomach," says Brian Wansink Ph.D., author of the forthcoming book, Slim by Design, Professor of Marketing and Director of the Cornell Food and Brand Lab. Wansink and co-author Katherine Abowd Johnson analyzed 1179 diners and concluded that we're a Clean Plate Planet. Although diners ...

Essays in English yield information about other languages

2014-07-22
Computer scientists at MIT and Israel's Technion have discovered an unexpected source of information about the world's languages: the habits of native speakers of those languages when writing in English. The work could enable computers chewing through relatively accessible documents to approximate data that might take trained linguists months in the field to collect. But that data could in turn lead to better computational tools. "These [linguistic] features that our system is learning are of course, on one hand, of nice theoretical interest for linguists," says Boris ...

NASA's Fermi finds a 'Transformer' pulsar

NASAs Fermi finds a Transformer pulsar
2014-07-22
VIDEO: Zoom into an artist's rendering of AY Sextantis, a binary star system whose pulsar switched from radio emissions to high-energy gamma rays in 2013. This transition likely means the pulsar's... Click here for more information. In late June 2013, an exceptional binary containing a rapidly spinning neutron star underwent a dramatic change in behavior never before observed. The pulsar's radio beacon vanished, while at the same time the system brightened fivefold in gamma rays, ...

Forty-five percent rise in diagnostic imaging tests by GPs -- new study

2014-07-22
A 45 per cent rise in diagnostic imaging tests ordered by Australian GPs is being driven by increasing GP visits, a rising number of problems managed at consultations and a higher likelihood that GPs order imaging tests for these problems, according to a new University of Sydney study released today. Based on a long term national survey of 9,802 GPs between 2002 and 2012, the report draws on data from more than 980,000 GP-patient encounter records to assess the extent to which GP's order tests in line with diagnostic imaging guidelines. "Most imaging tests ordered by ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Brain stimulation can nudge people to behave less selfishly

Shorter treatment regimens are safe options for preventing active tuberculosis

How food shortages reprogram the immune system’s response to infection

The wild physics that keeps your body’s electrical system flowing smoothly

From lab bench to bedside – research in mice leads to answers for undiagnosed human neurodevelopmental conditions

More banks mean higher costs for borrowers

Mohebbi, Manic, & Aslani receive funding for study of scalable AI-driven cybersecurity for small & medium critical manufacturing

Media coverage of Asian American Olympians functioned as 'loyalty test'

University of South Alabama Research named Top 10 Scientific Breakthroughs of 2025

Genotype-specific response to 144-week entecavir therapy for HBeAg-positive chronic hepatitis B with a particular focus on histological improvement

‘Stiff’ cells provide new explanation for differing symptoms in sickle cell patients

New record of Great White Shark in Spain sparks a 160-year review

Prevalence of youth overweight, obesity, and severe obesity

GLP-1 receptor agonists plus progestins and endometrial cancer risk in nonmalignant uterine diseases

Rejuvenating neurons restores learning and memory in mice

Endocrine Society announces inaugural Rare Endocrine Disease Fellows Program

Sensorimotor integration by targeted priming in muscles with electromyography-driven electro-vibro-feedback in robot-assisted wrist/hand rehabilitation after stroke

New dual-action compound reduces pancreatic cancer cell growth

Wastewater reveals increase in new synthetic opioids during major New Orleans events

Do cash transfers lead to traumatic injury or death?

Eva Vailionis, MS, CGC is presented the 2026 ACMG Foundation Genetic Counselor Best Abstract Award by The ACMG Foundation

Where did that raindrop come from? Tracing the movement of water molecules using isotopes

Planting tree belts on wet farmland comes with an overlooked trade-off

Continuous lower limb biomechanics prediction via prior-informed lightweight marker-GMformer

Researchers discover genetic link to Barrett’s esophagus offering new hope for esophageal cancer patients

Endocrine Society announces inaugural Rare Endocrine Disease Fellows Series

New AI model improves accuracy of food contamination detection

Egalitarianism among hunter-gatherers

AI-Powered R&D Acceleration: Insilico Medicine and CMS announce multiple collaborations in central nervous system and autoimmune diseases

AI-generated arguments are persuasive, even when labeled

[Press-News.org] The human parasite Leishmania is a probiotic for the fly that carries it