Why University of Calgary scientists are infecting sandflies with deadly parasites - Action News
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Why University of Calgary scientists are infecting sandflies with deadly parasites

The medical researchers are hoping that by studying how sandflies transmit a deadly disease, they can develop an effective vaccine to save lives.

Medical team hopes findings will lead to vaccine for deadly disease

University of Calgary scientists ready to infect thousands of insects with a deadly parasite

7 years ago
Duration 0:42
The Leishmaniasis parasite causes a disease that kills roughly 30,000 people per year, according to the World Health Organization

University of Calgary scientists are ready to start infectinga couple thousandsandflieswith a deadly parasite.

The medical research team is trying to understand more about how flying insects spread disease in particular, leishmaniasis, which can causefatal illness in humans. Symptoms range from a skin rash to organ failure.

In the past, researchers thought they had created a vaccine to the disease, that worked in tests where scientists injected the disease using a needle.

But when testing the vaccine on an infection from a sandflybite, it didn't work, scientist and lead researcher Nathan Peters told CBC Calgary on Tuesday.

"We've come to realize that the sandfly is not just a flying syringe or the mosquito or the tick is not just a flying syringe that happens to deposit the bacteria or parasite into the skin," Peters said.

"It's really changing the dynamics and the immune response in the skin to the point where a vaccine may look promising but when we use the natural model, it actually doesn't work at all."

Nathan Peters is an associate producer at the Cumming School of Medicine at the University of Calgary. (Radio-Canada)

The World Health Organization estimates up to 30,000 people die each year from the disease. About one million become infected, sometimes left with disfiguring scars.

On Tuesday, the medical team showed its speciallab to journalists before starting the tests on the insects.

It's about "the size of a generous en suite bathroom" and you need to pass through two interlocking doors with a pass cardin order to enter, said Peters, who is an associate professor with U of C'sCumming School of Medicine.

The insectary, as it's known, is considered to be high containment and the first of its kind. It cost between $230,000 and $240,000, Peters said.

A sandfly's bite can not only infect a person with a parasite but also change his or her immune response in the skin and how the blood clots, which has big implications for vaccine development. (Radio-Canada)

The sandfliesare locked inside a box, which is then contained by an incubator. The lab has anHVACsystem to maintain negative air pressure, and a variety of other measures are in place to ensure no flies escape to contaminate Calgary, he said.

The team expects to continue working for years to come. One of the questions will be how the disease interacts with other elements the fly injects into a mammal during a bite. For example, its fluids contain a substance that stops blood from clotting so they can suck it up for a meal.

Post-doctoral student Matheus Carneiro is helping to study the sandflies. He is from Brazil, where leishmaniasis is a major public health issue. (Radio-Canada)

"Of course, ideally we want to develop vaccines and improve drug therapies for the disease," said post-doctoral student Matheus Carneiro, who is from Brazil, where leishmaniasis is a major public health concern.

"But I do believe there are lots of gaps on understanding how the transmission happens and how the immune system responds against infection."

The team also employs post-doctoral fellow Chukwunonso Nzelu, who is an expert on sandfly colonies.

Leishmaniasis primarily affects people in Central and South America, as well as the Mediterranean, where sandflies live. However, the researchers say infectious disease specialists in Calgary each year treat a few patients who become infected while on vacation.


With files from the Calgary Eyeopener and Radio-Canada.