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致死性瘧原蟲 來自大猩猩

2010年09月28日
摘譯自2010年9月23日ENS美國,伊利諾州,芝加哥報導;洪美惠編譯;蔡麗伶審校

在中非共和國的野生西部低地大猩猩。圖片來源: Precious Primates。科學家之前認為,世界上致命的人類瘧疾,名為Plasmodium falciparum的惡性瘧原蟲,是來自黑猩猩(chimpanzee)、 矮黑猩猩(bonobo)或是遠古人類。但現在發現,瘧疾寄生蟲是來自大猩猩(gorilla)。

瘧疾是由瘧蚊(Anopheles mosquito)叮咬而引起的血液感染疾病。造成人類感染瘧疾的五種瘧蚊傳染的瘧原蟲,以惡性瘧原蟲最為嚴重,它每年造成數百萬人感染以及1百萬人死亡,而大部分案例都發生在非洲。

由國際聯盟組織的22位科學家共同合作瘧原蟲來源調查研究報告,發表在9月23日的「自然」(Nature)期刊。

研究工作以野生人猿的糞便進行DNA定序。實驗樣品取自研究HIV演化的樣本庫,其中有1827份來自黑猩猩、803份大猩猩以及107份矮黑猩猩。

研究人員調查了近3000個樣本,這些樣本位址分布在整個中部非洲。

他們發現,高瘧疾感染率、表現出瘧原蟲種群宿主的族群,包括西部大猩猩、大猩猩(Gorilla gorilla)、黑猩猩;但是,東部大猩猩, 大猩猩(Gorilla beringei),或矮黑猩猩則沒有受到感染。

數據顯示,西部低地大猩猩和黑猩猩已成為瘧原蟲宿主,因為惡性瘧原蟲是源自西部大猩猩。

芝加哥林肯公園動物園研究人員大衛摩根(Dave Morgan)博士指出,「在剛果共和國的Goualougo三角的大猩猩,表現出較高比率的瘧原蟲帶原。」摩根是Goualougo三角人猿計劃(Goualougo Triangle Ape Project)的主持人,他表示,「這些大猩猩族群是非常重要的,有助於了解瘧疾的生態以及跟大猩猩之間的關係。」。

研究中,人類的惡性瘧原蟲樣本,與來自西部大猩猩在喀麥隆、中非共和國和剛果共和國感染的瘧原蟲親緣最接近。 研究人員認為,單一的感染事件可能是「大猩猩--人類」的瘧疾聯繫起源。

研究人員很驚訝地發現,東部大猩猩或黑猩猩都沒有瘧原蟲感染,這表示在某些野生人猿族群,很少或是沒有瘧疾寄生蟲。

研究者也表示,目前還需要實地研究探討的是,東部黑猩猩和矮黑猩猩是否在其他地區受到瘧原蟲感染,以及牠們寄生在不同宿主卻未被檢查出來。摩根說,「需要更進一步研究的問題是,目前大猩猩的族群是否代表著人類反覆感染瘧疾的來源。」

根據世界衛生組織,在非洲每45秒就有一名兒童死於瘧疾,因瘧疾死亡佔全世界兒童死亡人數的20%。 到目前為止,非洲受到最大影響,占全世界因瘧疾死亡病例的85%以上。摩根說,「此類研究才能發展出根除瘧疾的策略,並提供說明瘧原蟲如何演化成適應人猿和人類。」

西部低地大猩猩瀕臨滅絕,但他們比他們的親戚山地大猩猩普遍。 他們生存在喀麥隆的熱帶雨林、中非共和國、剛果、赤道幾內亞、加蓬、安哥拉和剛果民主共和國。

Gorillas the Origin of Human Malaria's Most Lethal Strain
CHICAGO, Illinois, September 23, 2010 (ENS)

The world's most deadly form of human malaria, a parasite known as Plasmodium falciparum, is of gorilla origin, and not chimpanzee, bonobo or ancient human origin as scientists previously thought.

Malaria is a blood infection caused by the bite of the Anopheles mosquito. Of the five types of mosquito-borne Plasmodium parasites that cause malarial infection in humans, Plasmodium falciparum is the most dangerous. It is responsible for hundreds of millions of infections and more than one million deaths a year, most of them in Africa.

An international consortium of 22 scientists collaborated on the investigation into the source of Plasmodium falciparumand published their research results in the September 23 edition of the journal "Nature."

The research involved conducting DNA sequences of fecal samples collected from wild-living apes. The samples are found in specimen banks collected to investigate the evolution of HIV, including 1,827 from chimpanzees, 803 from gorillas and 107 from bonobos.

Researchers examined nearly 3,000 specimens from numerous field research sites throughout Central Africa.

They found high levels of malarial infection among western gorillas,Gorilla gorilla, and chimpanzees, populations of which act as natural reservoirs for Plasmodium species, but no infections among eastern gorillas, Gorilla beringei, or bonobos.

The data show that western lowland gorillas and chimpanzees represent substantial Plasmodium reservoirs, with P. falciparum being of western gorilla origin.

"An important finding was that gorillas in the Goualougo Triangle in the Republic of Congo, showed high prevalence of Plasmodium infection," said Chicago's Lincoln Park Zoo researcher Dave Morgan, PhD, an author on the study who leads the Goualougo Triangle Ape Project.

"This population of gorillas is very important in terms of understanding the ecology of malaria and its relation with gorillas," Morgan said.

The P. falciparum samples from humans included in the study were most closely related to parasites that infected western gorillas in Cameroon, the Central African Republic and the Republic of the Congo. Researchers believe a single transmission event may be the origin of the gorilla-human malaria link.

The authors were surprised to find that no Plasmodium infection was detected in eastern gorillas or bonobos, suggesting that malaria parasites are rare or absent in some wild-living ape communities.

Additional field studies are needed to determine if eastern gorillas and bonobos are infected with Plasmodium at other locations, or if they harbor divergent parasites not detected by current diagnostic assays, the authors said.

"One important question and area of further research is if current gorilla populations represent a source of recurring infection of malaria in humans," Morgan said.

In Africa a child dies every 45 seconds from malaria, according the World Health Organization, and the disease accounts for 20 percent of all childhood deaths worldwide.

By far, Africa is most impacted, accounting for more than 85 percent of the world's malaria deaths.

Morgan said, "Studies like this can assist in developing better malaria eradication strategies as well as provide information on how Plasmodium has evolved and adapted in both apes and humans."

Western lowland gorillas are endangered, but they are more common than their relatives, the mountain gorillas. They survive in the rainforests of Cameroon, Central African Republic, Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Angola, and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

全文及圖片詳見:ENS報導

作者

蔡麗伶(LiLing Barricman)

In my healing journey and learning to attain the breath awareness, I become aware of the reality that all the creatures of the world are breathing the same breath. Take action, here and now. From my physical being to the every corner of this out of balance's planet.