Timely Parasites

New research from scientists at McGill University has established that biological responses to microscopic parasitic organisms can differ depending on the time of day. That's right, if you have an infection, the time of day at which you were exposed to the microbial culprit might have a lot to do with how badly you are affected.

To establish this, the researchers studied Leishmania, a particularly heinous parasite that is carried and transmitted by female sand flies. Every year, this tropical parasite infects about 1 million people, kills thousands, and inflicts lasting scarring to those who survive.

A sand fly. Image Credit: Ray Wilson / Wikimedia Commons

These numbers have the potential to grow as climate change could allow sand flies to survive in more and more regions. It is crucial that we improve the treatment and prevention of these parasitic infections, so increasing our understanding of how infection occurs and how it might be affected by the time of day is a high priority.

To study this, the researchers injected mice with the parasite at different times of the day. The mice's immune responses were markedly different depending on the time they were infected.

New Treatment Possibilities

According to Nicolas Cermakian, lead author of the new study published in the journal Scientific Reports, "Our previous work showed that our immune system has its own biological clocks. Our body's defense mechanisms are more or less active at different times of the day."

He continued, "We already knew that viral and bacterial infections were controlled by our immune system's circadian rhythms, but this is the first time this is shown for a parasitic infection, and for a vector-transmitted infection."

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The research team aims to continue to better understand Leishmania's circadian rhythm on a molecular and cellular level and how this rhythm is controlled. If better understood, along with the developments of this study, it could lead to not only a better understanding of biology, but also to major advancements in both the treatment and prevention of a whole host of diseases.

Knowing the time of infection, or the likely time of infection based on the severity of the illness, might clue future researchers into more effective responses.


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