Vietnam Releases Dengue-Blocking Mosquito
(TRI NGUYEN ISLAND, Vietnam)
— Nguyen Thi Yen rolls up the sleeves of her white lab coat and
delicately slips her arms into a box covered by a sheath of mesh
netting. Immediately, the feeding frenzy begins.
Hundreds of mosquitoes light on her thin forearms and swarm her manicured fingers. They spit, bite and suck until becoming drunk with blood, their bulging bellies glowing red. Yen laughs in delight while her so-called “pets” enjoy their lunch and prepare to mate.
Hundreds of mosquitoes light on her thin forearms and swarm her manicured fingers. They spit, bite and suck until becoming drunk with blood, their bulging bellies glowing red. Yen laughs in delight while her so-called “pets” enjoy their lunch and prepare to mate.
The petite, grandmotherly entomologist — nicknamed Dr. Dracula —
knows how crazy she must look to outsiders. But this is science, and
these are very special bloodsuckers.
She smiles and nods at her red-hot arms, swollen and itchy after 10
minutes of feeding. She knows those nasty bites could reveal a way to
greatly reduce one of the world’s most menacing infectious diseases.
All her mosquitoes have been intentionally infected with bacteria
called Wolbachia, which essentially blocks them from getting dengue. And
if they can’t get it, they can’t spread it to people.
New research suggests some 390 million people are infected with the
virus each year, most of them in Asia. That’s about one in every 18
people on Earth, and more than three times higher than the World Health
Organization’s previous estimates.
Known as “breakbone fever” because of the excruciating joint pain
and hammer-pounding headaches it causes, the disease has no vaccine,
cure or specific treatment. Most patients must simply suffer through
days of raging fever, sweats and a bubbling rash. For those who develop a
more serious form of illness, known as dengue hemorrhagic fever,
internal bleeding, shock, organ failure and death can occur.
So how can simple bacteria break this cycle? Wolbachia is commonly
found in many insects, including fruit flies. But for reasons not fully
understood, it is not carried naturally by certain mosquitoes, including
the most common one that transmits dengue, the Aedes aegypti.
The germ has fascinated scientist Scott O’Neill his entire career. He
started working with it about two decades ago at Yale University. But
it wasn’t until 2008, after returning to his native Australia, that he
had his eureka moment.
One of his research students figured out how to implant the bacteria
into a mosquito so it could be passed on to future generations. The
initial hope was that it would shorten the insect’s life. But soon, a
hidden benefit was discovered: Wolbachia-infected mosquitoes not only
died quicker but they also blocked dengue partially or entirely, sort of
like a natural vaccine.
“The dengue virus couldn’t grow in the mosquito as well if the
Wolbachia was present,” says O’Neill, dean of science at Monash
University in Melbourne. “And if it can’t grow in the mosquito, it can’t
be transmitted.”
But proving something in the lab is just the first step. O’Neill’s
team needed to test how well the mosquitoes would perform in the wild.
They conducted research in small communities in Australia, where dengue
isn’t a problem, and the results were encouraging enough to create a
buzz among scientists who have long been searching for new ways to fight
the disease. After two and a half years, the Wolbachia-infected
mosquitoes had overtaken the native populations and remained 95 percent
dominant.
But how would it work in dengue-endemic areas of Southeast Asia? The
disease swamps hospitals in the region every rainy season with thousands
of sick patients, including many children, sometimes killing those who
seek help too late.
The Australians tapped 58-year-old Yen at Vietnam’s National
Institute of Hygiene and Epidemiology, where she’s worked for the past
35 years. Their plan was to test the Wolbachia mosquitoes on a small
island off the country’s central coast this year, with another release
expected next year in Indonesia.
Just getting the mosquitoes to Tri Nguyen Island was an adventure.
Thousands of tiny black eggs laid on strips of paper inside feeding
boxes had to be hand-carried inside coolers on weekly flights from
Hanoi, where Yen normally works, to Nha Trang, a resort city near the
island. The eggs had to be kept at just the right temperature and
moisture. The mosquitoes were hatched in another lab before finally
being transported by boat.
Yen insisted on medical checks for all volunteer feeders to ensure
they weren’t sickening her mosquitoes. She deemed vegetarian blood too
weak and banned anyone recently on antibiotics, which could kill the
Wolbachia.
“When I’m sleeping, I’m always thinking about them,” Yen says,
hunkered over a petri dish filled with dozens of squiggling mosquito
pupae. “I’m always worried about temperature and food. I take care of
them same-same like baby. If they are healthy, we are happy. If they are
not, we are sad.”
___
Recently, there have been several promising new attempts to control
dengue. A vaccine trial in Thailand didn’t work as well as hoped,
proving only 30 percent effective overall, but it provided higher
coverage for three of the four virus strains. More vaccines are in the
pipeline. Other science involves releasing genetically modified
“sterile” male mosquitoes that produce no offspring, or young that die
before reaching maturity, to decrease populations.
Wolbachia could end up being used in combination with these and other
methods, including mosquito traps and insecticide-treated materials.
“I’ve been working with this disease now for 40-something years, and
we have failed miserably,” says Duane Gubler, a dengue expert at the
Duke-NUS Graduate Medical School in Singapore who is not involved with
the Wolbachia research.
“We are now coming into a very exciting period where I think we’ll be able to control the disease. I really do.”
Wolbachia also blocks other mosquito-borne diseases such as yellow
fever and chikungunya, O’Neill says. Similar research is being conducted
for malaria, though that’s trickier because the disease is carried by
several different types of mosquitoes.
It’s unclear why mosquitoes that transmit dengue do not naturally get
Wolbachia, which is found in up to 70 percent of insects in the wild.
But O’Neill doesn’t believe that purposefully infecting mosquitoes will
negatively impact ecosystems. He says the key to overcoming skepticism
is to be transparent with research while providing independent risk
analyses and publishing findings in high-caliber scientific journals.
“I think, intuitively, it makes sense that it’s unlikely to have a
major consequence of introducing Wolbachia into one more species,”
O’Neill says, adding that none of his work is for profit. “It’s already
in millions already.”
Dengue typically comes in cycles, hitting some areas harder in
different years. People remain susceptible to the other strains after
being infected with one, and it is largely an urban disease with
mosquitoes breeding in stagnant water.
Laos and Singapore have experienced their worst outbreaks in recent
history this season. Thailand has also struggled with a large number of
patients. Cases have also been reported in recent years outside tropical
regions, including in the U.S. and Europe.
Vietnam has logged lower numbers this year overall, but the country’s
highest dengue rate is in the province where Yen is conducting her
work.
At the area’s main hospital in Nha Trang, Dr. Nguyen Dong, director
of infectious diseases, says 75 of the 86 patients crammed into the
open-air ward are infected with the virus.
Before jabbing his fingers into the stomach of one seriously ill
patient to check for pain, he talks about how the dengue season has
become much longer in recent years. And despite the government’s
increased education campaigns and resources, the disease continues to
overwhelm the hospital.
If the experiment going on just a short boat ride away from the
hospital is successful, it eventually will be expanded across the city
and the entire province.
____
The 3,500 people on Tri Nguyen island grew accustomed to what would
be a bizarre scene almost anywhere else: For five months, community
workers went house-to-house in the raging heat, releasing cups of
newborn mosquitoes.
And the residents were happy to have them.
“We do not kill the mosquitoes. We let them bite,” says fisherman
Tran To. “The Wolbachia living in the house is like a doctor in the
house. They may bite, but they stop dengue.”
Specimens collected from traps are taken back to the lab for analysis
to determine how well Wolbachia mosquitoes are infiltrating the native
population.
The strain of bacteria used on the island blocks dengue 100 percent,
but it’s also the hardest to sustain. At one point, 90 percent of the
mosquitoes were infected, but the rate dropped to about 65 percent after
the last batch was released in early September. A similar decrease
occurred in Australia as well, and scientists switched to other
Wolbachia strains that thrive better in the wild but have lesser
dengue-blocking abilities.
The job is sure to keep Yen busy in her little mosquito lab, complete with doors covered by long overlapping netting.
And while she professes to adore these pests nurtured by her own
blood, she has a much stronger motivation for working with them: Dengue
nearly claimed her own life many years ago, and her career has been
devoted to sparing others the same fate.
“I love them,” she says, “when I need them.”
1 comment:
this goes to show, something people do may seem crazy to others, but in science all over the world, this weird way of doing something is actually called experimentation for the benefit in science projects. i guess, khmer population hasn't grasp that concept, yet! well, learn from everybody from all over the world, you will understand cambodia and the world better!
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