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UCF scientist probes flesheatin­g bacteria for clues to next pandemic

- By Kevin Spear Orlando Sentinel

A bout with flesh-eating bacteria can start out with a day at the beach, a hardly worrisome cut and then, in less than 24 hours, a raging infection fought with heavy antibiotic­s and gruesome scalpel work.

It would be reassuring to know where and when Florida’s coastal waters are ripe with “one of the fastest growing organisms on earth,” said a University of Central Florida scientist.

Salvador Almagro-Moreno, a native of southern Spain, graduate student in Ireland and researcher at Dartmouth College, arrived at UCF in 2017, where he is now an assistant professor of medicine. He’s diving into the mysterious world of flesh-eating bacteria, which is nasty stuff for sure, but there’s a bigger target on his to-do list.

His main school of thought, from where he orchestrat­es research, instructs students and hopes to bring a difference, is from a concept called One Health, which the COVID-19 pandemic has ushered into prime time.

One Health acknowledg­es intricate, if often poorly known ties between people, animals, plants and their ecosystems in an interwoven fabric of life.

One Health expects that assaults from climate change, population growth and environmen­tal destructio­n could fray that fabric or shred it disastrous­ly, resulting in diseases such as cholera outbreaks, Ebola epidemics and, as suspected, the novel coronaviru­s, or COVID-19 pandemic and its 6 million global deaths, and still others nobody has heard of yet.

Biological rules

Almagro-Moreno wrote the cover story, “The Rise of New Pathogens,” for the current May-June edition of the American Scientist magazine.

“The emergence of novel human pathogens is without a doubt one of the most pressing problems that we face,” he said in the story. “I have been working for almost two decades trying to understand what the biological rules and evolutiona­ry forces are that make a microorgan­ism transition to causing disease in humans.”

Almagro-Moreno is pursuing simple but daunting questions: what are the warning signs for looming disease calamities, and how can they be interprete­d and best communicat­ed?

Each day, for example, the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency issues prediction­s at airnow.gov for several days of air quality.

The ozone smog forecast for Orlando was for moderate concern on Wednesday, meaning that people who are “unusually sensitive” to the lung-damaging pollutant should consider shortening activities outdoors.

Otherwise, forecasts for Thursday through Sunday called for good, or low levels of ozone smog.

That’s something of the approach that Almagro-Moreno hopes to achieve.

But trying to predict the behavior of a potentiall­y lethal organism as it ricochets among environmen­tal fluctuatio­ns, interactio­ns with animals and potential infections of humans — that’s way harder than forecastin­g the health risk of ozone smog, he said.

In no small part it’s harder because One Health science is in its infancy. In a sense, Almagro-Moreno is just beginning to develop momentum at laboratory.

“We know very little about the rules of pathogen emergence,” Almagro-Moreno said.

Model organisms

Florida struggles now with a pair of troublemak­ers that — incubated in natural environmen­ts, exacerbate­d by pollution and affecting people — speak to the One Health concept.

One is the occurrence along the state’s southwest coast of red tides, which are composed of single-cell organisms producing neurotoxin­s. They have caused massive die-offs of marine life and driven away tourists with lung-irrigating fumes.

Another is blue-green algae, or cyanobacte­ria producing toxins in fresh waters, including many Orlando lakes, and including Lake Ivanhoe, which is popular for aquatic sports but now is posted as hazardous because of cyanobacte­ria.

Almagro-Moreno lives nearby in the Mills 50 district and met at Lake Ivanhoe to discuss his research.

To understand the effects of chemicals or environmen­tal exposures, or to unravel genetic traits, scientists often turn to four creatures, the fruit fly, zebra fish, roundworm and mouse, for experiment­s.

Those four, all well documented, are called model organisms.

For his One Health investigat­ions, and more specifical­ly to probe the behaviors of waterborne pathogens, Almagro-Moreno also chose model organisms, but of a different nature.

The first is cholera, a disease recorded in thousands of years of history. He and students are collaborat­ing with Asian and Latin American countries to probe the evolution and outbreaks of cholera.

The second is a native of Florida, one that can be contracted through the prick of fish spine, nick from a seashell or, as well, from eating raw oysters.

It is flesh-eating bacteria. “This is their home — they have been here far longer than we have,” Almagro-Moreno said. The microorgan­ism, he said in a TEDx talk a few years ago, “a very proud Florida native.”

Spread like wildfire

To understand its behaviors, whether in a chill mode or on a rampage, his students have gone to the Indian River Lagoon in Brevard County for sampling of bacteria, environmen­tal conditions and other factors.

“I thought it was really suitable,” he said of flesh-eating bacteria, “for understand­ing what do you need to become a pathogen, what do you need to colonize humans, what do you need to kill humans and how does the environmen­t affect those traits?”

His ultimate goal is to develop a standardiz­ed approach for assessing and predicting emerging pathogens, an approach that can then have applicabil­ity for assessing other threatenin­g organisms.

“But, to be honest … the beauty of it is that I live in Florida,” he said. “So this work matters to me as a Floridan. It’s a win-win.”

Terrible outbreaks of disease are not new, Almagro-Moreno said.

“Unfortunat­ely for those of us trying to forecast them, they do not typically occur in a slow and predictabl­e fashion,” Almagro-Moreno wrote in his American Scientist story.

“Harmless organisms can undergo quantum leaps in evolution to become deadly and then spread like wildfire.”

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