Tag Archives: cancer

Lethal Adaptations In Nature: Tapeworms linking infection and cancer

Parasites are some of the oldest and basic forms of life on the planet. Each and every species having honed their specific traits to leech and infest their host often through millions of years of natural selection. It’s a scary thought, to say the least. And one particular widespread parasitic species has recently been discovered to have made significant jump. Tapeworms.

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Tapeworm proglottids (50cm in length)
Author: Nathan Reading via Flickr Commons

It’s a certain parasite that I’m quite concerned about every time I pick up an egg sandwich at local gas station. Tapeworms often infest the digestive tract of animals and use their hosts are intermediary stages in their life cycle. In the case of humans, that infection is usually caused by consuming undercooked foods. The photo of a vomited tapeworm above was taken from a pregnant 26-year-old patient who had been living in East Africa. As you can see, they can grow immensely large in your intestine without any symptoms (one of the optimal traits of a model parasite).

If that wasn’t enough to make your skin crawl, a study published in 1999 found that up to 75 million people may carry the dwarf tapeworm with 25% of children affected in certain areas. When taking a much closer look with an electron microscope (image below), you can clearly see that tapeworms have an effective adaption on its head: suckers, muscular grooves, and hooks to latch onto your inner digestive system. Though rarely lethal, newly published research has uncovered a potentially deadly link between these worms and cancer.

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Hymenolepis microstoma (rodent tapeworm)
Author: Magdalena ZZ via Wikimedia Commons

A brief report was published this past week in the New England Journal of Medicine, detailing an unprecedented case of a tapeworm (or any parasite of that matter) transferring cancer cells into a human. The team of American researchers led by Dr. Atis Muehlenbachs from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention claim it to be the first reported case of its kind. Easing public fears, it’s also been described as extremely unusual and rare.

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Source: The New England Journal of Medicine

The story begins in Columbia in 2013 when a 41-year-old man stumped local doctors of his deteriorating condition. He was ill, losing weight, and struggling with a prior HIV infection. Upon further examination, a CT scan of his lungs showed many tumorous growths which were made of cells not identified as human. That shocking revelation prompted them to contact scientists at the U.S. CDC.

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Figure 1 (A). Radiographic and Pathological Features of Malignant Hymenolepis nana.
(Muehlenbachs et al. 2015)
Source: The New England Journal of Medicine

The CDC center in Atlanta found the cells to be much smaller than human ones. Ten times smaller. Eventually, a genetic analysis found the strange cells had DNA from Hymenolepis nana (the dwarf tapeworm). The current theory is that the HIV patient’s compromised immune system and a mutation in the tapeworm caused this spread of cancerous cells from parasite to host.  For a more detailed explanation of the biological mechanisms involved, check out the helpful video below courtesy of the New England Journal of Medicine.

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It’s important to note that original patient died before he was correctly diagnosed. However, perhaps the results of this investigation may prove to be fruitful for others in the future as millions of people suffer from both tapeworms and HIV.

Tragedy aside, one has to admire how amazing this discovery is. For myself, I’m so impressed by the international collaboration of medical experts as well as the nature of the case. Even the language used in the original paper sounds very dramatic, Invasion of human tissue by abnormal, proliferating, genetically altered tapeworm cells is a novel disease mechanism that links infection and cancer.”  (*I’ve underlined some phrases to emphasize their impact.)

It feels like something out of the TV show House MD: a medical mystery, bizarre clues, the elusive search, and the extraordinary resolution. It’s the kind of passion that I believe Muehlenbachs shares.

“We were amazed when we found this new type of disease – tapeworms growing inside a person, essentially getting cancer, that spread to the person, causing tumor…” – Dr. Atis Muehlenbachs of the U.S. CDC

Furthermore, I’m sure this case will spark a new field in medical research of cross-species oncology. I admit that this mutation may not be very beneficial to the tapeworm as it prematurely kills off its human host and may end up being a once-in-a-life phenomenon. Nonetheless, it’s a great example of how a parasite can dramatically change the relationship with its host and how we should approach treatment of unknown diseases.

By Paul Yi

Commented on:

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Jelly-like Features of Disease-causing Proteins

I remember when I was a kid (or even now), one of my all time favourite snack is strawberry flavoured Jell-O (or jelly). Not to mention, making it was so easy and so much fun, as the strawberry aroma would fill the kitchen.

C. elegans worm used in the study. Source: Wiki Commons

C. elegans worm used in the study. Source: Wiki Commons

Scientists at the University of Cambridge, led by Peter St George-Hyslop used nematode worm C. elegans as a model for amyloid lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia to study the physical properties of FUS, an essential RNA-binding protein in the body. The behaviour and physical properties of FUS can be closely compared to that of jelly. All RNA-binding proteins have two common domains: one for binding RNA and the other where the protein appears to be unfolded. It is at this unfolded region that the FUS undergo a process of reversible ‘phase transition’, which closely resembles the formation of jelly.

Comparison of ALS-affected and normal nerve cell. Source: Sarah Scoles

Comparison of ALS-affected and normal nerve cell. Source: Sarah Scoles

One common characteristic of all neurodegenerative disease is the irreversible accumulation of misfolded or mutated proteins aggregates in the brain, which as a result causes damage to the brain and disrupts communication between brain cells.  FUS is one of many types of RNA-binding proteins that is essential to the brain. It is essential in the regulation of protein synthesis, with functions in the nucleus and cytoplasm of a cell. However, the accumulation of mutated FUS and other associated proteins is also the underlying cause of the neurodegenerative diseases such as ALS and frontotemporal  dementia. Until recently, the significance and how FUS proteins affects the development of these neurodegenerative disease has been unclear.

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[Video courtesy of C.D. Net]

FUS starts out as soluble monomers (like the initial powered-form of jelly), and forms distinct localized accumulations. As it further condenses, a thick gel-like hydrogel structure is formed (like the formation of jelly after it cools in the fridge). This process can be reversible (like warming and cooling jelly repeatedly). Furthermore, during these transitions, RNA and proteins are continuously released from protein assemblies (like suspended fruits in the jelly as it is re-warmed and re-cooled).

The above processes are beneficial because it allows the cells to accumulate cellular machinery in a confined three-dimensional space (with no cell membrane required)  when needed to perform key tasks, but also disassemble when not needed. In addition, it is also faster and less-energy costly compared to the formation of a membrane-bound vesicle.

Although FUS is able to carry out vital cell processes by interchanging between different states, “this essential property also makes them vulnerable to forming more fixed structures if mutated, disrupting their normal function and causing disease” says Professor St George Hyslop. Mutation of FUS causes it to over-condense and become a thick fibrous gel, irreversibly trapping the essential RNA and proteins required for protein synthesis. It is the accumulation of misshaped FUS and other RNA-binding proteins that causes serious neurodegenerative diseases. However, further research and understanding of what are in these assemblies can bring us one step closer to curing ALS and other neurodegenerative diseases.