Putrid camel pee could hold key to treatment for deadly African sleeping sickness
Camels
and other livestock suffer from trypanosomiasis, or sleeping sickness,
and understanding why it makes their pee smelly could help treat the
disease in humansHacienda la Colora / Flickr
Camels
suffer from infections from the same parasite that causes sleeping
sickness in humans and it makes their pee smell awful – identifying what
makes this smell could now lead to treatments for the disease in
humans, a study has found.
The pee of camels infected with
trypanosomes – which cause sleeping sickness in humans and is known as
nagana in domestic animals – is red-brown colour and smells putrid. This
is the work of the trypanosome parasite, transmitted by the tsetse fly,
which breaks down amino acids into a chemical called indolepyruvate, a study in the journal PNAS finds.
The indolepyruvate is released into the blood where it sabotages immune cells, making the host more vulnerable to the disease.
The
immune system is particularly affected by indolepyruvate at the peak of
infection, says study co-author Derek Nolan of Trinity College, Dublin,
Ireland. This actually prolongs the survival of the host even as the
disease develops, which increases the likelihood that the camel, or
human, will pass on the disease, which is transmitted by the tsetse fly.
"Camel
herders have long known that the urine of camels infected with
trypanosomes has a pungent odour, and is reddish brown in colour," says
Nolan. "We found that this is directly attributable to parasite
breakdown of aromatic amino acids, such as tryptophan, in the host, and
to the excretion of the novel by-products into the bloodstream."
"We
are hopeful that by solving the riddle of the putrid camel pee, these
new insights have unearthed a potential target for anti-trypanosome
therapies," says Nolan.
Understanding the mechanism by which
trypanosomes undermine the immune system could lead to targets for
better treatments for sleeping sickness. Existing treatments
for the disease are toxic and not particularly effective given the
difficulty of acquiring the drugs in rural areas, and the complex ways
in which they must be administered. A cow is injected with the drug diminazen to treat trypanosomiasis (sleeping sickness) in Negele, EthiopiaUS Army Africa / FlickrThe number of reported cases of sleeping sickness dropped below 10,000 for the first time in 50 years, according to the World Health Organization.
In 2014 there were 3,796 cases reported. There has been an 85 per cent
reduction in cases since 2000, but 61 million people in Sub-Saharan
African countries are still at risk of the disease.
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