The Chronicle

Venom to kill parasite

- Darius Koreis CSIRO

CARDS on the table: if you’re squeamish this is going to be a difficult read.

Gastrointe­stinal parasites cost the sheep industry about $400 million each year in treatment costs and lost productivi­ty, with huge implicatio­ns for animal welfare.

The most common way of de-worming Australia’s more than 67 million sheep is by drenching them.

But the huge problem facing our farmers is that most worm population­s are now showing resistance to the drugs which are used, making it more and more difficult to cure infections.

This drug resistance is leading our scientists to work with The University of Queensland’s Institute for Molecular Bioscience to look for new treatments derived from the venom of animals such as spiders, scorpions and assassin bugs.

Our very own Samantha Nixon, UQ PhD student and Westpac Future Leaders scholar, is studying the effect of the venom from all things nasty on another particular­ly shady character – the Barber’s pole worm (Haemonchus contortus).

A blood-feeding gut worm by trade, the Barber’s pole worm is a sheep’s worst nightmare.

Although these worms are relatively small (three centimetre­s in size) compared to tapeworms in sheep, which can be over a metre in length, Samantha says it’s the sheer number of the candy cane lookalikes that can overwhelm a sheep’s body.

“The number of adult worms in a sheep’s gut can be as high as 10,000, and these worms can actually drain 10% of the sheep’s blood each day. If that happened to you, you can imagine that you would feel very ill,” Samantha said.

This can quickly become a fatal spiral for a sheep’s health. They end up anaemic, malnourish­ed and very weak, and can rapidly lose weight. Sudden death can occur if the infection remains untreated.

“From an animal welfare perspectiv­e, these parasites are absolutely devastatin­g. From a farmer’s perspectiv­e, the loss of productivi­ty is huge. You have drastic reduction in the quality and quantity of wool and meat, which really hurts the industry,” she says.

The good news is that spider venoms contain powerful chemicals that could be used to fight these infections.

FIGHTING CREEPIES WITH CRAWLIES

Venoms are an amazing untapped resource to look for potential drugs, having evolved over millions of years to deliver fine-tuned, potent and fast-acting chemicals.

Unfortunat­ely though, drug discovery is a time-consuming process. The average drug takes more than 10 years to go through the process of discovery and testing before being released onto the market. The process is no different for Samantha’s work, though she had to overcome a fear of spiders just to get started.

“First we milk the venom, and then purify it before testing the crude venom against the parasite. Then we go back and forth between fractionin­g the venom and testing it to pick out the bioactive molecules,” she says.

Factory farming venom out of animals like spiders isn’t feasible so to develop a cost-effective drug, you would need to create such a molecule at mass scale using methods like protein expression. The hope is that such a drug would be effective against multiple types of parasites. The drug might also be effective in other livestock and even in people.

 ?? PHOTOS: CONTRIBUTE­D ?? INCREASING PROBLEM: Gastrointe­stinal parasites cost the Australian sheep industry about $400 million each year; the Barber’s pole worm (Haemonchus contortus); and spider venoms are an amazing untapped resource to look for potential drugs.
PHOTOS: CONTRIBUTE­D INCREASING PROBLEM: Gastrointe­stinal parasites cost the Australian sheep industry about $400 million each year; the Barber’s pole worm (Haemonchus contortus); and spider venoms are an amazing untapped resource to look for potential drugs.
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