Sea
otters benefit from medical school research
Marine mammal's population is dropping because
of infectious disease
By MITZI BAKER
It's not often that School of Medicine
researchers get to apply their expertise to creatures other than
humans, but John Boothroyd, PhD, recently had the chance to
collaborate with a team led by UC-Davis to search for clues about
an infection that kills sea otters.
In recent years, California sea otters have been dying in
increasing numbers. Part of the problem is attributed to infectious
diseases such as toxoplasmosis.
Toxoplasma gondii is perhaps the most wide-spread parasite
on earth, said Boothroyd, professor of microbiology and immunology,
who has studied the single-celled organism for years. Almost any
warm-blooded animal can be infected, including humans, but it
rarely causes symptoms except in the severely immune compromised
and in developing fetuses.
In sea otters, however, toxoplasmosis can result in a fatal brain
infection.
The UC-Davis team found previously that many sea otters were
infected with toxoplasma. They wondered what could be learned from
knowing which strain infected an otter, so they turned to Boothroyd
for help in the genetics and biology of toxoplasma.
“This is real-life science, which I love,” said
Boothroyd. “It's where the rubber meets the road and we lose
the ability to do controlled experiments.” There are no sea
otters used in experiments, he said, so the studies are based on
observation, much like studies with humans.
Michael Grigg, a postdoctoral scholar in Boothroyd's lab at the
time, genetically analyzed toxoplasma samples from 35 California
sea otters found dead on the beach between 1998 and 2002. In the
March 9 issue of the International Journal for
Parisitology, they and their colleagues reported that out of
the three known types of toxoplasma strains, 40 percent of the
otters had one type, but the other 60 percent had a previously
unidentified type, which they called “type x.” They
found that three-quarters of the ones that had died of
toxoplasmosis had type x, which also happened to be clustered
around one coastal location.
Very little was known previously about the strains that infect
other animals, said Boothroyd, since most sampling in the past has
been from humans and some livestock. He said they didn't have
enough information to be surprised by their results and that type x
may well be the dominant strain in the wild.
Studies like this may help determine how to end the devastating
decline in sea otter populations. If more facts were known about
which strains were causing the most severe disease, Boothroyd said,
there might be interventions that could save lives, such as
vaccination with a less-harmful strain that could offer protection
against the lethal strain.
“I think this qualifies as translational medicine,”
said Boothroyd. “I enjoy seeing our basic research on
population biology lead to important clinical findings, even if the
patient ends up being a sea otter. We're not the only species on
Earth that matters.”
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