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These Parasites Really Get Under Your Skin
It is scary enough when parasitic diseases such as malaria and amoebic dysentery get into the body, but molecular biologist Antonio Teixeira of the University of Brasilia has found something even more frightening. At least one parasite — Trypanosoma cruzi (T. cruzi), which causes Chagas disease — can worm its way into your DNA, becoming a permanent, heritable part of your genes.
Though mostly eradicated in the United States, Chagas disease claims 100,000 lives a year in South America. Transmitted by the bites of bugs that live in tropical regions, the protozoan T. cruzi damages or destroys vital organs, especially the heart, over a period of years.
On a hunch, Teixeira extracted DNA from the hearts of 13 adults infected with T. cruzi. Teixeira then infected chicken eggs with the parasite and examined both the resulting chickens and two generations of its offspring for T. cruzi DNA. Sure enough, he found parasitic DNA in all the offspring of the infected chickens.
The findings hint that the protozoa responsible for toxoplasmosis, amoebic dysentery, malaria, and other diseases may also insinuate themselves into human genes. If so, we probably all carry remnants of parasitic DNA passed along by infected ancestors. The big question then becomes, what is that parasitic DNA doing to us? “It isn’t proven yet that getting into the DNA is critical to causing Chagas or any other disease,” Teixeira says. “But I’d think it was odd if it didn’t influence anything.”
(www.discovermagazine.com. Adaptado.)
Segundo o texto, o pesquisador responsável pelo experimento
estudou 13 adultos infectados pelo T. cruzi para poder achar uma forma de impedir que os protozoários chegassem aos corações deles.
misturou DNA infectado por T. cruzi extraído de adultos humanos com o DNA de ovos de galinha também infectados com o parasita.
infectou ovos de galinha com o T. cruzi e procurou o DNA do parasita nos filhotes que nasceram, bem como nas duas gerações seguintes.
infectou 13 adultos com o protozoário T. cruzi para estudar os problemas cardíacos deles.
encontrou DNA do T. cruzi e de outros parasitas em todas as gerações de galinhas utilizadas no estudo.