 
How new diseases from insects hit people like the plague
08 September 2004
Scientists have traced the first steps in the way some new diseases
emerge, and how harmless bacteria living in insects become dangerous
disease-causing bugs which can affect humans, like the plague
or anthrax. Researchers from the University of Bath are presenting
their results today (Wednesday, 08 September 2004) at the Society
for General Microbiology's 155th Meeting at Trinity College Dublin.
The scientists believe that because of the similarities between
human and insect immune systems, any bacteria that have successfully
evolved to infect insects already have a head start if they attack
people.
"There are millions of bacteria in the environment, and
sometimes they cause 'emerging diseases' by attacking people -
in other words a new type of disease which we haven't seen before.
But this is not a completely new phenomenon, the bacteria may
have been around for centuries, it is just that a new strain is
suddenly able to infect humans as well as other animals,"
says Dr Nick Waterfield of Bath University. "We need to understand
the mechanism that the bacteria are using to change their disease-causing
ability if we are to successfully treat emerging diseases before
they get out of control and become epidemics."
A very infectious bacterium that attacks insects, Bacillus
thuringiensis, is closely related to the microbe that causes
anthrax in humans, a bacterium called Bacillus anthracis.
Similarly the plague bacterium, Yersinia pestis, evolved
relatively recently from an ancestor, Yersinia psuedotuberculosis,
by passing through the fleas which carried it, and moved across
rats to humans.
"We believe that these interactions between bacteria and
insects may significantly contribute to the evolution of human
diseases," says Dr Waterfield. "There are two main ways
insects help the bacteria: by passing microbes directly into our
bloodstream when they bite us - like fleas or ticks; and by acting
as a reservoir to cook up future human diseases."
"The picture is further complicated by climate change, which
seems to be altering the range of places insects can survive and
breed, bringing new insects which can carry ancient diseases into
the Northern hemisphere," says Dr Waterfield.
The scientists have been studying a newly recognised but non-lethal
bacterium called Photorhabdus asymbiotica that has been
identified by hospitals in both the United States and Australia,
which provides a safe system to study the problem. This bacterium
seems to have evolved from the well known insect-disease causing
bacteria, Photorhabdus luminescens and Photorhabdus
temperata, which attack insects with the help of their nematode
worm partners.
The researchers hope that a better understanding of the role
of insects in the evolution of diseases will allow scientists
to identify situations that could act as a source of new infection.
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