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Genetically Modified Fungus Could Fight Malaria, Reduce DDT Use

Genetically Modified Fungus Malaria

By MARIA CHENG   04/ 7/11 06:34 AM ET   AP

LONDON -- In a cramped London laboratory filled with test tubes, bacteria and mosquitoes, scientists are trying to engineer a new weapon in the battle against malaria: a mutant fungus.

For years, Angray Kang at Westminster University and colleagues have been testing whether they could genetically tweak a fungus to kill the malaria parasite carried by mosquitoes.

Now they've found that in lab experiments, mosquitoes exposed to the fungus show a sharp drop in levels of the parasite. If it works that way in the wild, that should make it harder for the disease to infect people.

Kang said the mutant fungus could be sprayed onto walls and bednets like insecticides and could be made for a comparable cost.

He said the same process of genetic modification could also be used to target other insect-spread diseases like dengue and West Nile virus. The research was done together with scientists at the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health and was funded by the U.S. National Institutes of Health. Early results were published recently in the journal Science.

"This is very exciting research," said Andrew Read, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Dynamics at Pennsylvania State University. He has worked on similar projects but was not involved with the fungus research. "It tells us that if you can't find something in nature to do what you want, you can just make it."

Read said using the souped-up fungus might be less environmentally invasive than other genetic approaches. Some critics have warned that competing biological approaches, like scientists creating mutant mosquitoes, could wreak havoc to ecosystems if billions of the insects are released into the wild.

With the fungus, "you just spray it on the wall and it does its job," Read said. "You don't have to worry about generation after generation of the stuff."

He also said the fungus technology could be a new way of dealing with insecticide-resistant mosquitoes, an increasing problem that has meant the return of effective but controversial sprays like DDT. "With the (mutant) fungi, you wouldn't have chemical residues hanging around," he said. "It would just be a fungus very similar to what is already found in nature."

In laboratory tests, Kang and colleagues found mosquitoes exposed to the mutated fungus had malaria parasite levels about 85 percent lower than normal. When they added a scorpion toxin to the mix, levels dropped by 97 percent. No tests have shown whether using the fungus would curb human malaria cases, but experts think fewer malaria parasites should translate into fewer cases.

"If the strategy works and there are fewer parasites, this could change how malaria is spread and reduce transmission to humans," said George Christophides, an infection expert at Imperial College London who was not associated with the research.

Kang's experiment involved inserting a human antibody against malaria into a fungus commonly found in soil and plants worldwide. Spores made by the fungus burrow into the mosquito, invading its circulatory system. When the malaria-causing parasite multiplies inside the insect, the antibody keeps the parasites from reaching the mosquito's salivary glands. That theoretically stops the disease's spread.

"The mosquito can be infected by malaria, but it can't pass it onto humans," Kang said. The mutated fungus then eats away at the mosquito from the inside, killing the insect after a couple of weeks. That's long enough for the mosquito to reproduce, which should lessen its incentive to evolve resistance to it.

The same fungus – minus the genetic modifications – is already produced in industrial quantities to squash locust outbreaks in Australia. The fungus is naturally lethal to locusts, so no genetic modification is needed.

If Kang and colleagues can get enough funding, they hope to test the mutant fungus in malaria-endemic countries like Burkina Faso, Kenya or Tanzania.

Other experts doubted whether the laboratory experiment could be replicated in the wild. "It's a neat scientific idea, but there are questions about (the mutated fungus's) stability and formulation," said Janet Hemingway, director of the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine. She said the mutant fungus would have to survive being shipped to Africa and then be viable for another three to six months in stifling heat once it's sprayed onto walls or bednets.

One group that campaigns against genetically modified organisms warned the mutant fungus could skew behaviors of other wildlife.

"The release of any genetically modified organism into the environment runs the risk that it may have wider impacts than just its target," said Pete Riley, campaign director of GM Freeze, a U.K.-based advocacy group. He said the modified fungus could have unintended consequences which might be impossible to reverse. "Nature has a pretty cunning way of getting around everything we throw at it," he said.

Kang acknowledged that simply having a new mutant fungus would not stop malaria. "We still need better drugs and other interventions," he said. "But malaria kills about a million people every year so we have to try whatever may work."

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LONDON -- In a cramped London laboratory filled with test tubes, bacteria and mosquitoes, scientists are trying to engineer a new weapon in the battle against malaria: a mutant fungus. For years, Ang...
LONDON -- In a cramped London laboratory filled with test tubes, bacteria and mosquitoes, scientists are trying to engineer a new weapon in the battle against malaria: a mutant fungus. For years, Ang...
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09:11 AM on 04/26/2011
It seems horrible to use a fungus since we humans get a lot of fungus in our own bodies.
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Mister Grumpy
An Angry American
04:46 PM on 04/08/2011
I don't know about you, but I don't care much for the term "mutant".
12:20 AM on 04/09/2011
Neither did the Teenage Ninja Turtles.
theaustralian
to the far left of right wing democrats
08:00 AM on 04/08/2011
scince will not stop no matter how much religious people and some ignorant liberals moan. viva la science.
08:22 AM on 04/08/2011
you mean ignorant conservatives. They are the ones that squashed stem-cell research cuz Jesus said it was a good idea.
07:36 AM on 04/08/2011
Mutant fungus?!? What, did they break into my gym bag and steal my sneakers?!?!?
08:17 AM on 04/08/2011
That would be limburger cheese
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Mister Grumpy
An Angry American
04:47 PM on 04/08/2011
That's toe jam............
07:15 AM on 04/08/2011
How about a big can of "Raid", I'll take that over "fungus in a can" any day.
03:59 AM on 04/08/2011
Teenage Mutant Ninja Fungus.
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03:36 AM on 04/08/2011
Teenage Mutant Ninja Fungi !
04:00 AM on 04/08/2011
Oh my Lord, I just posted the same thing immediately after you without even noticing someone had already posted it. Lol.
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04:10 AM on 04/08/2011
Well, I want to be Michael Angelo.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SilentSolidarity
So what do you need? Besides a miracle.
03:15 AM on 04/08/2011
Yeah. It will fight malaria. A week after that, it will have fought humankind, too. I'm all for biotechnology as long as people are doing their job seriously and don't push dangerous products into the real world.
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04:27 AM on 04/08/2011
I'm inclined to agree to your assessment of these people who lack the foresight to see that they can be unleashing something more sinister than that they're trying to fight. Well that, and I am terrified of fungi.
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Mister Grumpy
An Angry American
04:49 PM on 04/08/2011
I agree........ Even the scientists in South America had good intentions when they cross bred honey bees........ and we all know how that turned out..............
09:22 PM on 04/07/2011
There is a very cheap yet effective cure for malaria in the form of a dilute chlorine dioxide, called MMS (Miracle Mineral Supplement). This is claimed to cure 98% of cases within 24 - 48 hours. Just google Jim Humble and/or MMS for info. You make it yourself by using a 28% solution of sodium chlorite, adding some drops of a food acid such as lemon juice or citric acid, waiting 3 minutes until the chlorine dioxide is formed, then diluting this with water and drinking it. Many thousands in Africa apparently have been cured using this method, at least according to the inventor Jim Humble. It sound like bleach but it isn't chlorine. Cl02 breaks down into salt and water in the body, no THM's are formed as with chlorine.
12:15 AM on 04/08/2011
Nice try you snake oil selling loon. I see that this man Jimmy has read about patent medicines, panaceas that are claimed to be miracles, but it's a scam. Do you know what people call "alternative medicine" when it actually works? Medicine! So go get a real education in medicine and be productive you fool!
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KarlaElisa
The atmosphere is Toxic
06:02 PM on 04/07/2011
I saw this headline and was set to come here, read a cool article and post 'I love fungi!'.

But it's frankenstein fungi. And I endorse NO transgenic crap. They're bent on replacing every real thing with these fake things that spread and of course, Gov'ts will allow it.

Everything else I want to say will get me thrown in jail so you all just use your imaginations...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kevin Atlanta
Active Citizen 54
11:59 AM on 04/07/2011
A similar product, Thuricide, is commonly used to combat caterpillars like Cabbage Lopers with no remarkable impact upon the ecology.

A mutated fungus in Malaria regions could be a God-send for the populations living there.

The biggest questions I have are:
What happens to the base of the food chain when mosquito larvae are removed or infected larvae from mating adults enter the ecology?
Is the decline slow enough to allow other food sources to multiply and replace it?
What of the predators of mosquito adults?
What is the impact on Arachnids, Bats, Birds, other insects?
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onionboy
Blessed are the Cheese Makers
02:30 PM on 04/07/2011
Good questions. Right now, they don't even know if the lowered parasitic-load results in reduced infection to humans. So, they're a long way off.

My first question is whether the reduced load actually benefits mosquitoes. From my recollection malaria isn't good for the mosquitoes either. So, could we actually increase mosquito lifespan or reproduction rates in the wild? And then if the reduced load does NOT decrease infection much or at all, we could effectively be making the problem worse.

Very clever idea very early in the game.
05:59 AM on 04/08/2011
The article clearly states: This fungus doesn't kill the mosquito. It just reduces the rate of transmission of the parasite to 3% of the present rate.
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04:30 AM on 04/08/2011
Mutated or chemically engineered fungi may very well do many wonderful things, but what happens if the researchers fail to see the long term picture and it becomes an invasive species that causes more damage--whether it is environmental, health, or ecological?
06:32 AM on 04/08/2011
All that you fear can happen without any human changes. It has happened in the past with the Plague. Regardless, you express the same fear those who fought the polio vaccine once did.