• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Health Videos

Leeches therapy industry booms

As leech therapy gains popularity, a laboratory near Moscow is boosting production of this increasingly valuable -- and slimy -- commodity.  Video 

Under the knife, without the knife

Autopsies have gone virtual thanks to Swiss forensic pathologists who are conducting about 100 ''virtopsies'' a year.  Video 

Infection cuts mosquitoes' lives short

SYDNEY
Fri Jan 2, 2009 6:02pm EST
A dengue patient (R) and her father wait for treatment at a special dengue ward inside a hospital in the northern Indian city of Allahabad in this file photo from October 17, 2006. REUTERS/Jitendra Prakash

SYDNEY (Reuters) - Infecting mosquitoes with a common bacteria can cut their lives short and reduce the likelihood they will transmit dengue and other diseases, Australian researchers reported on Friday.

Science  |  Health  |  Lifestyle

They genetically engineered bacteria known as Wolbachia so they would infect the Aedes aegypti mosquito species that carry the dengue virus, and found infected mosquitoes lived half as long as uninfected mosquitoes.

This could reduce the chances they will transmit the virus to people, as the virus takes about two weeks to mature and become infectious inside a mosquito's body, they report in Friday's issue of the journal Science.

"Dengue virus and the disease it causes is only transmitted to humans by the older female Aedes aegypti mosquito," said Scott O'Neill, head of University of Queensland's School of Biological Science.

"If we can introduced this into populations it should move the management of dengue fever from an outbreak management paradigm to a prevention paradigm," O'Neill said in a telephone interview.

Wolbachia bacteria, which occur naturally in fruit flies, allowed the mosquito to live long enough to reproduce and spread to its young, but not to mature to the stage when it is capable of transmitting dengue.

There is no vaccine or cure for dengue fever, which is a painful and debilitating disease also known as breakbone fever. When it takes on a hemorrhagic form it can kill, and dengue kills 22,000 people a year.

"Dengue around the world is getting worse now. We are seeing more and more activity around the world including Australia," said O'Neill.

His team hopes to infect a caged population of mosquitoes in Australia's tropical Queensland state. More than 50 cases of dengue have been confirmed in northern Queensland since November.

"If that proves successful we hope to deploy this new dengue control measure in other parts of Australia, as well as Thailand and Vietnam," O'Neill said.

"Ultimately we would like to see if it could be applied to other diseases transmission systems like malaria, which we are currently working on as well," he said.

The researchers now need to show that Wolbachia will spread naturally among mosquitoes the way they do among fruit flies, Andrew Read and Matthew Thomas of Pennsylvania State University said in a commentary.

And then it is possible that dengue viruses would evolve the ability to multiply more quickly inside a mosquito's body, they noted.

(Reporting by Pauline Askin; editing by Maggie Fox and Mohammad Zargham)



More from Reuters

Time Warner Cable, Fox at impasse; blackout looms

NEW YORK (Reuters) - About 13 million Time Warner Cable Inc subscribers will lose Fox programing at midnight unless the cable service provider reaches a last-minute deal to pay News Corp fees to broadcast the network's shows.

 A picture of an arrow in this file photo. REUTERS/File

The coming Great Inflation

Real or imagined, Americans have plenty of things to worry about. Should inflation be one of them?  Full Article 

People walk past a branch of Bank of America in New York's financial district April 28, 2009. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

Move your money

Boycotting "too big to fail" banks is a great idea -- so long as investors remember that banks aren't the only ones responsible for the crisis.  Full Article