'Miraculous' Mosquito Hack Cuts Dengue By 77% (bbc.com) 67
Dengue fever cases have been cut by 77% in a "groundbreaking" trial that manipulates the mosquitoes that spread it, say scientists. The BBC reports: They used mosquitoes infected with "miraculous" bacteria that reduce the insect's ability to spread dengue. The trial took place in Yogyakarta city, Indonesia, and is being expanded in the hope of eradicating the virus. The World Mosquito Programme team says it could be a solution to a virus that has gone around the world. The trial used mosquitoes infected with Wolbachia bacteria. One of the researchers, Dr Katie Anders, describes them as "naturally miraculous." Wolbachia doesn't harm the mosquito, but it camps out in the same parts of its body that the dengue virus needs to get into. The bacteria compete for resources and make it much harder for dengue virus to replicate, so the mosquito is less likely to cause an infection when it bites again.
The trial used five million mosquito eggs infected with Wolbachia. Eggs were placed in buckets of water in the city every two weeks and the process of building up an infected population of mosquitoes took nine months. Yogyakarta was split into 24 zones and the mosquitoes were released only in half of them. The results, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, showed a 77% reduction in cases and an 86% reduction in people needing hospital care when the insects were released.
The trial used five million mosquito eggs infected with Wolbachia. Eggs were placed in buckets of water in the city every two weeks and the process of building up an infected population of mosquitoes took nine months. Yogyakarta was split into 24 zones and the mosquitoes were released only in half of them. The results, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, showed a 77% reduction in cases and an 86% reduction in people needing hospital care when the insects were released.
Re:Hack? (Score:4, Informative)
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At least they didn't call it a "literal" miracle.
If they did that, they'd be a bunch of loosers.
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Stop calling things miracles while you're at it. Until the Pope agrees, it's a blessing at best.
We need to get this miracle thing a little better defined than that. Three standard deviations from the mean should certainly be called a miracle. I would entertain a motion to define it as two standard deviations and beyond. Any closer to the mean is a blessing.
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Stop calling things miracles while you're at it. Until the Pope agrees, it's a blessing at best.
We need to get this miracle thing a little better defined than that. Three standard deviations from the mean should certainly be called a miracle. I would entertain a motion to define it as two standard deviations and beyond. Any closer to the mean is a blessing.
Would your definition make winning the lottery a miracle?
Even though people win all the time?
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Would your definition make winning the lottery a miracle?
Even though people win all the time?
Good question. I suppose it's relative. For the winner it's a miracle. For society, it's not.
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Getting people to stop believing that some old fart surrounded by gold and sycophants, running an organization that specializes in raping and killing children, does NOT have some direct line to a mythical man in the sky, now that would be a miracle. Getting people to stop believing in similar shit including religions that promote misogyny, killing people who don't want to be in their club, killing and beating people who enjoy a good cow steak dinner, or elevate another human to godhood, that would be bigger miracle.
Now bow down and accept your huge Whoosh!
100% agreement. (Score:2)
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Stop saying a virus "hangs out" or "uses resources" -- viruses are objects unless they're being absorbed/misinterpreted as useful by cells.
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Wolbachia is a bacteria but Dengue is a virus. How do bacteria and viruses compete for resources?
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I don't fully understand your complaint. Many objects use resources: the verb doesn't imply volition.
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Viruses do not use resources. They have no metabolism. They are just instructions that can be taken up and executed by host cells.
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Fire uses resources.
Not GMO? (Score:5, Insightful)
That's a pretty great result for not needing a GMO. Because the universe tends to find a way to have unintended consequences, and a brand new gene sequence that someone cooks up in a lab 10 years from now that mutates into something devastating comes to mind as an obvious future cautionary tale.
At least spreading something already found in nature is likely to surprise us with a manageable disaster, you know, like rabbits introduced to Australia... err ok maybe 'manageable' is a spectrum, and a bit nuanced.
Re:Not GMO? (Score:5, Informative)
You're on the verge of discovering that natural vs human made isn't really important. What's important is that whatever is done is done well.
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You're on the verge of discovering that natural vs human made isn't really important. What's important is that whatever is done is done well.
Nature is harsh and unforgiving. It gave us dengue fever in the first place. The bar is pretty low for human improvement. Just don't cause an outcome worse than dengue is currently.
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You're on the verge of discovering that natural vs human made isn't really important. What's important is that whatever is done is done well.
We must always remember, Arsenic is a natural substance.
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Or "would you rather eat a randomly chosen mushroom from the forest floor, or a randomly chosen pill from the OTC aisle at the grocery store?"
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Or "would you rather eat a randomly chosen mushroom from the forest floor, or a randomly chosen pill from the OTC aisle at the grocery store?"
Well, not either - but if I was held down and forced, the random pill, and just hope it isn't a laxative. 8^)
Re:Not GMO? (Score:5, Funny)
Re: Not GMO? (Score:2)
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Sauna's, I believe.
Gorillas culled by freezing (Score:4, Funny)
That only works in a temperate climate as in Springfield. Dengue is a problem where the weather never gets down to freezing.
Re:Gorillas culled by freezing (Score:4, Funny)
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Gorillas don't eat snake. They eat plants, and the occasional insect.
That is clearly the only weakness in your plan, however.
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Exactly how many times has that happened? Are you mistaking popular entertainment for reality?
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Exactly how many times has that happened? Are you mistaking popular entertainment for reality?
Even the conspiracy covid "bioweapon cooked up in a Chinese lab" was no match for mother nature. She's already made at least 4 better versions [who.int] so far.
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Exactly how many times has that happened? Are you mistaking popular entertainment for reality?
That's how the Ancient Aliens gave us Bigfoot. The Discovery channel told me so. They were using GM to make ultra strong workers to build the pyramids and control the nuclear reactors in their cores. Then it all got out of hand when Sasquatch discovered Beef Jerky.
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"Then it all got out of hand when Sasquatch discovered Beef Jerky"
Is that what the kids are calling it nowadays?
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They could've gotten to the result much faster if they had release sterile male mosquitoes at the same time they were releasing the infected eggs.
The point wasn't to reduce the mosquito population though. But to spread the infection and reduce the incidence of Dengue.
Wolbachia are also spectacularly manipulative and can alter the fertility of their hosts to ensure they are passed on to the next generation of mosquitoes.
It means once Wolbachia has been established, it should stick around for a long time and continue to protect against dengue infection.
Messing with the number of mosquitoes might have interfered with the analysis of the results too.
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They could've gotten to the result much faster if they had release sterile male mosquitoes at the same time they were releasing the infected eggs.
With Wolbachia bacteria you want wild male mosquitoes to mate with infected females so that any eggs created by an infected female will carry the bacteria.
Wolbachia also only allows reproduction through infected female mosquito's this means that if a wild female mates with an infected male she will lay eggs that are infertile.
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The lab in Wuhan seems to have perhaps made a pretty significant error
Mother Nature : Dengue virus mutates (Score:2)
and become sx as worse as it is now.
Just wait for it. Nature can't be fooled this easily with human 'hacks'.
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Viruses don't actually try to be harmful to their hosts. They'd really prefer that their host not even notice that they were around. It's just that they need resources to reproduce, and the host wants to use those resources in a different way.
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This prevents transmission of Dengue (Score:2)
Stopping the transmission of Dengue by Mosquitoes using the bacteria Wolbachia.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
Must have been hard to get approved. (Score:2)
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5 million mosquitos is not a lot...
Thats one of the great things about Wolbachia bacteria once you have a large enough population of Wolbachia infected mosquito's
these will infect the rest of the wild population in the local area. Mosquito's that are infected with Wolbachia don't transmit dengue.
Re:Must have been hard to get approved. (Score:4, Informative)
Community approval for wMel releases was obtained from the leaders of 37 urban villages after a campaign of community engagement and mass communication. Written informed consent for participation in the clinical component of the trial was obtained from all the participants or from a guardian if the participant was a minor. In addition, participants 13 to 17 years of age gave written informed assent.
Wish someone (Score:2)
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You don't want to get rid of mosquitos. They're very, very important to the local ecology.
Fun fact, most mosquitos, including all male mosquitos, don't even bite humans. Many are sap-suckers and pollinators.
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Australia can help manage this (Score:2)
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Harsh, But Can We Live With The Consequences (Score:2)
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Not sure what colonizing nearly a century or longer ago has to do with it. That is politically correct nonsense.
There are more than a few people still flying confederate flags who might disagree with the idea that things that happened 'a century or longer ago' have no bearing on the here and now.
Great! (Score:2)
It's all fine and dandy until this Wolbachia virus mutates, creates dengue zombies, and reduces civilization to a post apocalypse civilization that can only be saved by Wil Smith.