Fungus-tainted corn a factor in Africa HIV spread?

(Reuters Health) – A new study raises the question of whether corn contaminated with a fungus-derived toxin is helping to facilitate the transmission of HIV in sub-Saharan Africa.

Health

The toxins, called fumonisins, are produced by a particular type of fungus that can grow in corn after the plant is damaged by pests such as the cornstalk borer.

Fumonisins may be harmful to human health, with some studies linking consumption of the toxins to an increased rate of cancer of the esophagus, the tube that connects the throat to the stomach.

In the new study, published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, researchers looked at whether there may be a relationship between HIV transmission in sub-Saharan Africa and general consumption of foods prone to contamination with fumonisins or other fungus- produced toxins (known as mycotoxins).

Using data from the World Health Organization and the Food and Agriculture Organization, the researchers found that as sub-Saharan countries’ per-person corn consumption rose, so did HIV transmission rates.

In countries with a relatively higher percentage of Muslims — a factor linked to lower HIV rates — those with high per-capita corn consumption had an estimated HIV infection rate of 291 per 100,000 people in one year. In contrast, the rate in those with low corn consumption was 74 per 100,000 people.

Meanwhile, in countries with both fewer Muslims than average and higher-than-average corn consumption, there were 435 HIV cases per 100,000 people.

The researchers also found that higher per-capita corn consumption correlated with a higher rate of esophageal cancer. Since fumonisin toxins have been linked to that cancer, the finding serves as an indicator that populations with high corn consumption were exposed to higher levels of the toxin.

What all of this means is not yet clear. This appears to be the first study to find an association between corn consumption and HIV transmission rates in sub-Saharan Africa, lead researcher Dr. Jonathan H. Williams, of the University of Georgia in Griffin, told Reuters Health in an email.

The findings, he and his colleagues say, must be considered preliminary and need to be backed up by further research.

It is biologically plausible that high fumonisin intake could make a person more vulnerable to HIV infection. According to Williams, research suggests that the toxin makes certain tissues more vulnerable to infections by viruses.

A number of factors have been identified as key in sub-Saharan Africa’s HIV transmission rates; male circumcision, for example, has been shown to lower heterosexual transmission, while having multiple concurrent sex partners or other sexually transmitted infections increases the risk.

The current findings raise the possibility that food safety — in particular, the issue of fumonisin-contaminated corn — is an additional factor.

Based on their statistical model, Williams and his colleagues estimate that if the “maize (corn) factor” were eliminated in sub-Saharan Africa, HIV transmissions could be cut by as much as 58 percent.

Contamination might be prevented, for instance, by planting corn varieties genetically modified to be resistant to pests. It may also be possible to remove contaminants, Williams said, through certain milling technologies or by soaking the grain in water; fumonisin is water-soluble, so “steeping” the grain or meal, then discarding the liquid may remove the toxin.

In a region where an estimated 1.7 million people become infected with HIV annually, that would mean more than 1 million infections averted each year, the researchers note.

All of that, however, remains speculation until further research is done confirming the link between contaminated corn and HIV.

SOURCE: link.reuters.com/bad29k American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, online May 19, 2010.

Phil Spector fears he will catch Valley Fever with jail move

New York, Sep 2 (ANI): American record producer Phil Spector, who is being moved out of the California Substance Abuse Treatment Facility and State Prison in Corcoran after complaining he feared for his safety, has now said that he fears he would die from Valley Fever in the new prison.

Spector, 69, who was convicted of killing Lana Clarkson, is being moved to Pleasant Valley State Prison in Coalinga this week, but he fears that the outbreak of Valley Fever, which has killed 16 inmates in the last four years, will also kill him.

“They are sending Phil there to die. He is scared to death. When I saw him on Saturday, he was shaking . . . He’s 70 years old and 130 pounds . . . We are trying to appeal over this, but he’s been told he has no time,” the New York Post quoted his frantic wife Rachelle Short as saying.

“He’s already been given his bus pass out of Corcoran,” she added.

Valley Fever is caused by a fungus that resides in soil, and is released as spores.

“We cannot comment on prisoners who may be moved here in the future,” a Pleasant Valley rep said. (ANI)

One ant species has given up sex completely

Washington, Aug 26 (ANI): Texas and Brazilian researchers have confirmed the complete asexuality of a widespread fungus-gardening ant-called Mycocepurus smithii- the only ant species in the world known to have dispensed with males entirely.

Most social insects-the wasps, ants and bees-are relatively used to daily life without males with their colonies being run by swarms of sterile sisters lorded over by an egg-laying queen.

However, eventually, all social insect species have the ability to produce a crop of males who go forth in the world to fertilize new queens and propagate.

According to Christian Rabeling, Ulrich Mueller and their Brazilian colleagues, queens of the ant Mycocepurus smithii reproduce without fertilization and males appear to be completely absent.

“Animals that are completely asexual are relatively rare, which makes this is a very interesting ant.

Asexual species don’t mix their genes through recombination, so you expect harmful mutations to accumulate over time and for the species to go extinct more quickly than others. They don’t generally persist for very long over evolutionary time,” said Rabeling.

Earlier studies on the ants from Puerto Rico and Panama have pointed toward them being completely asexual.

One particular study showed that the ants reproduced in the lab without males, and that no amount of stress induced the production of males.

Scientists believed that specimens of male ants previously collected in Brazil in the 1960s could be males of M. smithii, but if males of the species existed, it would suggest that-at least from time to time-the ants reproduce sexually.

The researchers analysed the males in question and discovered that they belonged to another closely related (sexually reproducing) species of fungus-farmer, Mycocepurus obsoletus, thus establishing that no males are known to exist for M. smithii.

They also dissected reproducing M. smithii queens from Brazil and found that their sperm storage organs were empty.

Overall comparison made the researchers to conclude that the species is very likely to be totally asexual across its entire range, from Northern Mexico through Central America to Brazil, including some Caribbean islands.

As for the age of the species, the scientists have estimated that the ants could have first evolved within the last one to two million years, a very young species given that the fungus-farming ants evolved 50 million years ago.

Rabeling said that he is using genetic markers to study the evolution and systematics of the fungus-gardening ants and this will help determine the date of the appearance and genetic mechanism of asexual reproduction more precisely in the near future.

The study has been published in PLoS ONE. (ANI)

Pharaohs’ tombs in Egypt may disappear in 150yrs, warns head of antiquities

London, August 19 (ANI): Egypt’s head of antiquities Zahi Hawass has warned that the tombs of the pharaohs in Valley of the Kings may disappear within 150 to 500 years if they remain open to tourists.

The Valley of the Kings and Valley of the Queens, where Ancient Egypt’s royalty was mummified, is home to the tombs of legendary pharaohs such as the boy king Tutenkhamun and Queen Nefertiti.

Hawass said that humidity and fungus were eating into the walls of the royal tombs in the huge necropolis on the west bank of the Nile across from Luxor.

Pointing out that several thousand tourists visit the place every day, he said that poor ventilation and the breath of the hordes of visitors were causing damage to the carvings and painted decorations inside the tombs.

He said so while on a tour of the royal necropolis with journalists on Monday. e also revealed that the authorities had decided to close some tombs to tourists, and replace them with replicas, including those of Tutenkhamun, Nefertiti and Seti I.

According to reports, the country’s Supreme Council of Antiquities have already taken a series of measures to protect the tombs, including setting up new ventilation systems and restricting the number of visitors.

“The tombs which are open to visitors are facing severe damage to both colours and the engravings,” the Telegraph quoted Hawass as saying.

“The levels of humidity and fungus are increasing because of the breath of visitors and this means that the tombs could disappear between 150 and 500 years,” he added. (ANI)

New pill shows promise in fighting fleas and ticks in dogs and cats

Washington, June 29 (ANI): A new once-in-the-month pill has been found to be effective in controlling both fleas and ticks in dogs and cats, say researchers.

Peter Meinke and colleagues at Merck Research Laboratories obtained the flea and tick fighter from a substance found in a fungus.

“(The substance) has the potential to usher in a new era in the treatment of ecoparasitic [ticks and fleas, for instance] infestations in companion animals,” Live Science quoted the researchers as saying.

When tested on dogs and cats, a single dose of the new pill was found to be 100 percent effective in protecting against fleas and ticks for a month.

Moreover, there were no signs of toxic effects on the animals.

The findings appear in Journal of the Medicinal Chemistry. (ANI)

Mites living on hissing cockroach may harbour allergy cure

Washington, Apr 30 (ANI): A new research has revealed how tiny mites living on the surface of cockroaches may prove to be advantageous to humans with allergies.

Mites, who thrive on the surface of Madagascar hissing cockroaches help decrease the presence of a variety of moulds on the cockroaches’ bodies, which in turn reduces allergic responses among humans who handle the popular insects.

For the study, the researchers cultured and identified fungi on the cockroaches’ body surfaces with and without mites and discovered that the presence of these mites reduced the moulds by at least 50 percent.

“We haven’t proved yet that this helps the cockroaches, but reducing the fungi present on their surface is beneficial overall. By suppressing the molds, the mites have a role in reducing allergic reactions to cockroaches,” said Joshua Benoit, a doctoral student in entomology at Ohio State University and a co-author of the study.

In a previous study on the Madagascar hissing cockroach, or Gromphadorhina portentosa, researchers discovered the moulds on cockroach surfaces.

But, as it turns out, not all colonies of Madagascar hissing cockroaches harbour the mites, a species called Gromphadorholaelaps schaeferi.

Although the researchers are unaware of the reason behind such preference, they found that the cockroaches that do harbour mites also harbour fewer moulds on their bodies.

In the study, female cockroaches with mites had 64 percent fewer fungal colonies than those lacking mites. In males, the difference was 31 percent, and in nymphs, or younger and smaller cockroaches, there were 24 percent fewer fungi.

For conforming if mites were responsible for the reduction in fungi, the researchers tested colonies with and without mites, but also removed mites from colonies that originally had mites and added mites to cockroaches that didn’t initially harbour any mites.

In all cases, the presence of mites resulted in lower levels of mould.

“The presence of the mites caused a reduction in all fungi on the surface, not just a select few kinds of fungus,” said Jay Yoder, a professor of biology at Wittenberg University and lead author of the study.

While almost 20 to 25 mites live on each adult cockroach, the scientists experimented by adding more mites to the insects’ surfaces, but found that more mites didn’t result in a more significant reduction in molds.

“The number on each insect is based on the food available,” said Benoit.

As of now, the researchers have described the symbiotic relationship as commensalism rather than mutualism, which means that just one species clearly benefits and no damage is done to the other.

The research is published in the current issue of the journal Symbiosis. (ANI)

The all-female ant species that doesn’t need sex to reproduce

London, April 15 (ANI): Biologists at the University of Arizona have identified an all-female species of ant, which has dispensed with sex.

The researchers have revealed that the ant species – Mycocepurus smithii – rely upon cloning for reproduction. They say that the queen ants copy themselves to produce genetically identical daughters.

According to the research team, this species cultivates a garden of fungus, which also reproduces asexually.

Biologist Anna Himler, who led the research, revealed that the research team used a battery of tests to verify their findings.

Upon “fingerprinting” DNA of the ant species, the researchers found them all to be clones of the colony’s queen.

The researchers later dissected the female insects, and found them to be physically incapable of mating.

They said that an essential part of the ants’ reproductive system, known as the “mussel organ”, had degenerated.
While asexual reproduction of males from unfertilised eggs is a normal part of some insect reproduction, the researchers noted that such a process in females is “exceedingly rare in ants”.

“In social insects, there are a number of different types of reproduction. But this species has evolved its own unusual mode,” the BBC quoted Dr. Himler as saying.

She agreed that her team had yet to find out why the particular ant species had become fully asexual.

Her team are presently conducting more genetic experiments to find out how long ago the evolutionary change occurred.

Dr Himler has revealed that her interest in Mycocepurus smithii was originally sparked by their ability to cultivate crops.

“Ants discovered farming long before we did – they have been cultivating fungus gardens for an estimated 80 million years,” she said.

While many different species of ant cultivate fungi, this particular species is able to grow “a greater number of crops than other ant species,” she explained.

Since the fungus crop reproduces asexually, Dr. Himler thinks that it might give the ants some kind of advantage “not to operate under the usual constraints of sexual reproduction”.

“There is certainly more work to be done in this system. We’re quite excited about the direction this research might take us, and its implications,” she said.

The study has been published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B. (ANI)

PRESS DIGEST – Washington Post – April 11

WASHINGTON, April 10 (Reuters) – The Washington Post included the following items on its front page on April 11 Reuters has not verified these stories and does not vouch for their accuracy.

WASHINGTON – Senior Obama administration officials are debating how to address a potential terrorist threat to U.S. interests from a Somali extremist group, with some in the military advocating strikes against its training camps. But many officials maintain that uncertainty about the intentions of the al-Shabab organization dictates a more patient, nonmilitary approach.

DALLAS – The U.S. presidency that is remembered on the street where former President George W. Bush now lives bears little resemblance to the one that most of the country continues to blame for its problems. Bush left Washington on Jan. 20 with two-thirds of Americans disapproving of his job performance. In his return to private life, Bush has maintained tranquillity by adhering to a basic philosophy: He lives squarely in the remaining 33 percent.

KABUL – When Afghanistan’s government quietly enacted a sweeping law last month restricting the rights of minority Shiite women, few Afghans were aware of what it said. But since the law’s contents became known here just over a week ago, it has provoked an extraordinary public debate on the once-taboo topic of religion and sex in this conservative Muslim nation and spurred an unprecedented protest by senior officials.

SAFFORD, Ariz. – April Redding was waiting in the parking lot of the middle school when she heard news she could hardly understand: Her 13-year-old daughter, Savana, had been strip-searched by school officials in a futile hunt for drugs. The lawsuit that April and Savana Redding brought over the incident carries the potential for redefining the privacy rights of students and the responsibility of teachers and school officials charged with keeping drugs off their campuses.

WASHINGTON – First, the frogs began disappearing, with as many as 122 species becoming extinct worldwide since 1980. Then honeybee colonies began to collapse. Scientists fear that bats might be next. For the past three years, biologists in Virginia have been nervously watching a strange die-off of bats in the Northeast as a mysterious fungus spread rapidly through hibernating bat colonies.

Ants that carry anti fungal bacteria could be key to advances in biofuels and antibiotics

London, March 30 (ANI): In a new research, scientists have found that leaf-cutting ants that carry colonies of anti fungal bacteria on their bodies, contain a chemical which could help speed the quest to develop better antibiotics and biofuels.

In a mutually beneficial symbiosis, leaf-cutting ants cultivate fungus gardens, providing both a safe home for the fungi and a food source for the ants.

But, according to a report in Nature News, this 50-million-year-old relationship also includes microbes that new research shows could help speed the quest to develop better antibiotics and biofuels.

Cameron Currie, a microbial ecologist then at the University of Toronto in Ontario, Canada, discovered ten years ago that leaf-cutting ants carry colonies of actinomycete bacteria on their bodies.

Now, Currie, Jon Clardy at the Harvard Medical School in Boston and their colleagues reported that they had isolated and purified one of these antifungals, which they named dentigerumycin, and that it is a chemical that has never been previously reported.

The antifungal slowed the growth of a drug-resistant strain of the fungus Candida albicans, which causes yeast infections in people.

Because distinct ant species cultivate different fungal crops, which in turn fall prey to specialized parasites, researchers hope that they will learn how to make better antibiotics by studying how the bacteria have adapted to fight the parasite in an ancient evolutionary arms race.

“These ants are walking pharmaceutical factories,” said Currie, now at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.

According to John Taylor, a mycologist at the University of California, Berkeley, Currie’s continued scrutiny of the lives of ants provides insights into the web of interactions necessary for the survival of any single species.

“I think the coolest thing about this is that you start with one organism, and then you find more and more organisms involved in the relationship,” he said. (ANI)

Salamanders may soon become extinct due to global warming

Washington, Feb 10 (ANI): A new study has suggested that due to global warming, salamanders may soon become extinct, with a sharp decline in the number of species worldwide.

According to a report in National Geographic News, researchers have said that two common species surveyed in the 1970s in cloud forests of southern Mexico and Guatemala are extinct, and several others have plummeted in number.

The tiny amphibians seem to be on the same downward spiral as their frog cousins, which have been mysteriously declining for years.

Scientists have identified chytrid, a fast-killing fungus that may spread in waves, as responsible for wiping out frogs around the world.

But, among the Central American salamanders, “there’s no way we can attribute the declines we’ve found to chytrid,” said study author David Wake, a biologist at the University of California, Berkeley. Instead, Wake said that global warming “makes perfect sense.”

In the 1970s, Wake spent several years researching lungless salamanders in the San Marcos region of western Guatemala, one of the most diverse and well-studied salamander communities in the American tropics.

Between 2005 and 2007, he and colleagues returned to that region and previous study sites in Mexico to survey salamanders and compare their results to the historical data.

Their data-collecting strategy remained the same: Spot as many salamanders as possible in a standard amount of time.

The results shocked Wake.

“Cold facts written on a piece of paper don’t convey the impact on my psyche when I went there,” he said. Species that could be seen 10 to 15 times an hour in the 1970s were “completely gone.”

“These species lived in forests at mid-elevations, up to 2,800 feet (853 meters) – a zone where global warming is most intense,” Wake said.

Seven out of 62 salamanders tested showed signs of chytrid fungus, which is not enough direct evidence to link the fungus to the drop in numbers, said the authors.

As for saving the elusive creatures, there are few solutions, said Wake. But, it’s clear that “locking up nature” in reserves is not going to work.

According to Wake, climate change and chytrid fungus don’t respect borders. “We need to promote activities that reduce the impact of climate change,” he said. (ANI)

Scientists team with curators to stem decay of humanity’s greatest art and cultural treasures

Washington, Feb 9 (ANI): Biotechnology scientists have teamed up with curators and heritage experts to find innovative ways to stem the decay of some of humanity’s greatest art and cultural treasures.

This move is part of a 4-day, UN-affiliated international conference in Caracas, Venezuela.

“With the world financial crisis and the advent of climate change effects, there is a state of emergency at the museums of several tropical countries: entire collections are compromised,” said Alvaro Gonzalez, a researcher at the Caracas-based Institute of Advanced Studies (IDEA) and Director of Venezuela’s Cultural Heritage Conservation Foundation, the host of the event.

According to Jose-Luis Ramirez, Director of the United Nations University’s Programme for Biotechnology for Latin America and the Caribbean (UNU-BIOLAC), an event sponsor, “The normal concern about single artifacts is no longer paramount.”

“Storing and protecting entire collections safely has become a priority and scientists have a key role: developing techniques and procedures that are fundamental to heritage conservation,” Ramirez added.

Many of the world’s cultural treasures are creations made of organic materials such as paper, canvas, wood and leather, which, in prolonged warmth and dampness, attract mold, micro-organisms and insects, causing decay and disintegration.

New biotechnology techniques to be described include the use of micro-organisms to remove fungus and other problems on artwork, photos, documents, masonry and more.

In addition to biotechnologies, experts will revisit ancient ideas such as the Japanese technique of preserving frail items within multiple boxes.

They will highlight the potential use of Styrofoam packaging to economically protect items from rising heat, humidity and other environmental hazards.

Information to be shared includes how temperature, relative humidity, and dew point risk or benefit collections, the new technologies available to measure and analyze museum environment data, how to manage environments with minimal or no mechanical equipment and non-toxic, non-destructive treatments of cultural heritage items.

According to UN Under Secretary-General Konrad Osterwalder, Rector of UNU, “The items in museum collections have timeless cultural, scientific and aesthetic values that we hold in trust for future generations. They also have great commercial value derived from exhibitions, souvenirs, tours and publications.”

“Despite the current economic downturn, we all have a great responsibility to ensure historic objects are managed and used in a sound and sustainable way and to safeguard them from the potential effects of a warming planet,” he added. (ANI)

Ultra-fine oil-water emulsion may fight superbugs linked to cystic fibrosis deaths

Washington, Feb 5 (ANI): A super-fine oil-and-water emulsion, already shown to kill many other microbes, could quash the ravaging, often drug-resistant infections leading to nearly all cystic fibrosis deaths, according to University of Michigan scientists.

Cystic fibrosis is an inherited chronic lung disease characterised by mucus-clogged lungs that leave patients vulnerable to repeated, ever more serious respiratory infections.
“A key finding in the study is that we have a product that shows very good activity against a variety of bacteria that are very resistant to all known antibiotics. These really are superbugs,” said John J. LiPuma, M.D., first and corresponding author of the study.
Nanoemulsions developed in the study consist of soybean oil, water, alcohol and surfactants forced by high-stress mechanical extrusion into droplets less than 400 nanometers in size.
These emulsions have already proved to be non-toxic, potent killers of bacteria such as Streptococcus pneumoniae, H. influenzae and gonorrhea, of viruses such as herpes simplex and influenza A, and of several fungi. Nanoemulsion treatments for cold sores and toenail fungus are in Phase 3 clinical trials.
“We have a product that looks like it could be safely administered to the lungs of people with cystic fibrosis,” said LiPuma.

If future trials show that patients can tolerate effective doses of the nanoemulsion, this could be a major breakthrough in the treatment of cystic fibrosis, he said.
The novel physical mode of action — the nanoemulsion appears to kill bacteria by disrupting their outer membranes – makes developing resistance unlikely, LiPuma says.
“Given that this technology works differently from antibiotic drugs, it provides a potential alternative for treatment in antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Since the material has already shown success in treating skin infections, we believe it has potential to treat antibiotic-resistant lung infections,” said a co-author on the study.

If the technique proves safe and effective, people would inhale the nanoemulsion using a nebulizer and be able to reduce the severity and frequency of infections that spiral out of control due to resistance to current antibiotics.
In cell cultures in the lab, the scientists tested a nanoemulsion against 150 bacterial strains that attack cystic fibrosis patients.

The emulsion proved effective at killing all of them, including one-third that are resistant to many antibiotics and 13 percent that resist all antibiotics.
They then tested the nanoemulsion against several bacterial strains grown in biofilms and sputum, to more closely simulate conditions in a patient’s body.

Antibiotics often can’t penetrate biofilms and sputum unless given at high doses with unacceptable side effects.
“We saw, not surprisingly, that greater concentrations of nanoemulsion were required to kill the bacteria, but we saw no strains that were resistant,” said LiPuma.

Whether humans can tolerate those concentrations well remains to be seen.
The study is published in the journal Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy. (ANI)