Medicine Hat News

Mosquito gut bacteria may offer clues to malaria control

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WASHINGTON Mosquitoes harbour gut bacteria just like people do — and the bugs inside the bugs may hold a key to fighting malaria.

Today, bed nets and insecticid­es are the chief means of preventing malaria, which sickens about 200 million people around the world and kills 400,000 a year, mostly children in Africa. But what if scientists instead could hatch malariares­istant mosquitoes?

Johns Hopkins University researcher­s reported Thursday that beneficial bacteria living inside a mosquito’s gut can help do just that — two somewhat accidental discoverie­s that, if they pan out, might one day offer a novel way to protect against malaria.

“If you get it to work, these mosquitoes would remain resistant,” said George Dimopoulos, a microbiolo­gy professor at Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health who helped lead the research. Instead of having to kill swarms of mosquitoes, “you would basically convert a malaria-transmitti­ng mosquito population to one that cannot transmit.”

Malaria is spread by female Anopheles mosquitoes that bite an infected person and then, after the disease-causing parasites incubate inside the insect’s gut, pass on the infection by biting someone else.

People, animals, even insects harbour a community of mostly healthy intestinal bacteria, what's called the gut microbiome. Researcher­s have long known that some of those natural mosquito germs are capable of attacking malaria parasites. The hurdle: How to spread that protection to enough mosquitoes in the wild to make a difference.

One Hopkins team discovered an oddball strain of bacteria that mosquitoes can easily pass to one another. Called Serratia AS1, it lives in both the gut and ovaries of mosquitoes.

Geneticall­y altering that bacteria to emit some antimalari­a compounds suppressed parasite growth without hurting the mosquitoes. Researcher­s fed the revved-up germs to a small number of mosquitoes and let them mate with normal mosquitoes in the lab. Sure enough, the entire next generation harboured the malaria-suppressin­g germ, Hopkins malaria researcher Marcelo Jacobs-Lorena reported in the journal Science.

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