Parasites take an enormous toll on human and veterinary health. But researchers may have found a way for patients with brain disorders and a common brain parasite to become frenemies. A new study published in Nature Microbiology has pioneered the use of a single-celled parasite, Toxoplasma gondii , to inject therapeutic proteins into brain cells.
The brain is very picky about what it lets in, including many drugs, which limits treatment options for neurological conditions. As a professor of microbiology , I’ve dedicated my career to finding ways to kill dangerous parasites such as Toxoplasma . I’m fascinated by the prospect that we may be able to use their weaponry to instead treat other maladies.
Microbes as Medicine Ever since scientists realized that microscopic organisms can cause illness – what’s called the 19th-century germ theory of disease – humanity has been on a quest to keep infectious agents out of our bodies. Many people’s understandable aversion to germs may make the idea of adapting these microbial adversaries for therapeutic purposes seem counterintuitive. But preventing and treating disease by co-opting the very microbes that threaten us has a history that long predates germ theory.
As early as the 1500s , people in the Middle East and Asia noted that those lucky enough to survive smallpox never got infected again. These observations led to the practice of purposefully exposing an uninfected person to the material from an infected person’s pus-f.