[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

President Trump Fired IRS Commissioner

Fermented Stevia Extract Kills Pancreatic Cancer Cells In Lab Tests

Sorry About That!

Cash Jordan: Looters EMPTY 52 Stores... as Washington DC Collapse

Whitney Webb: Clinton's 28 Island Trips: Epstein's Blackmail Machine Exposed!

White College Girl Arrested, Charged With Battery for Allegedly Touching Shoulder of Jewish Man in IDF Shirt

Jeremiah Johnston: Shroud of Turin, Dead Sea Scrolls, & Attempts to Hide Historical Proof of Jesus

Democrats' Trust In Institutions Hits New Record Low

President Trump Is More Popular In Britain Than The British Prime Minister

How A Debt Free Dollar Can Save The World

NYC to Open Nation’s First Trans-Only Homeless Shelter —

Cash Jordan: Migrant Mob SEIZES Home Depot... ICE Responds

Cash Jordan: Mexican Mob SEIZES Texas Town… US Troops Inbound

Volcanoes in Russia now erupting EN MASSE following earthquake

SOTT Earth Changes Summary - July 2025: Extreme Weather, Planetary Upheaval,

Russia Just DESTROYED London's Gold Market Monopoly FOREVER! - Mike Maloney

RECORD $100B in T-Bills Issued as U.S. Debt Crisis Turns Desperate

RFK Jr.'s Food Revolution Begins Next Month

Is Rachel Maddow Trying to Get Trump Killed?

'DEATH TO THE IDF': American Who Invaded Gaza Has Cars Torched In St Louis Attack

Michael Jordan Respects Caitlin Clark

MSNBC claims there is “no evidence” against the Obama and Biden Administration

Rand Paul Makes Russell Brand Go Quiet with This Chilling (Covid) Warning

Cash Jordan: ICE deploys strike teams to NYC

ITV pulling zero punches in this incredible footage

Nurse Blows Whistle on Cover-Up of 5000% Surge in Fetal Deaths Caused by Covid Vaccines

Matt Taibbi Obliterates Dean Of Columbia Journalism School In Open Letter

Southern Kamchatka shifted nearly two meters (6 1/2 feet) After 8.8 Megaquake

Cash Sent Home By Mexicans Craters 16.2% In June As More Immigrants Leave US Workforce

Lefties Losing It: Trump shocks journalists with rooftop walk


Science/Tech
See other Science/Tech Articles

Title: Parasites That Control Behavior
Source: http://sciencefictionbiology.blogspot.com/
URL Source: http://sciencefictionbiology.blogsp ... tes-that-control-behavior.html
Published: Oct 4, 2006
Author: http://sciencefictionbiology.blogspot.co
Post Date: 2008-01-20 12:00:41 by robin
Keywords: None
Views: 143
Comments: 2

Wednesday, October 04, 2006

Parasites That Control Behavior

Sometimes real science is stranger than fiction. Stanford Professor Robert Sapolsky describes a number of examples of parasites or infectious microbes that modify behavior in a Scientific American review article titled "Bugs in the Brain" (pdf)*. Some examples from the review and recent scientific literature:

• The rabies virus increases saliva production and makes the infected host aggressive. When a rabid animal bites a host the virus is spread via saliva in the wound.

Toxiplasma gondii causes infected rodents to specifically lose their inborn aversion to cat pheromones. This behavior is beneficial to toxiplasma, because it sexually reproduces in cats that have eaten infected mice and rats (original article). Infected cats in turn spread toxiplasma through their droppings. People infected with toxiplasma also exhibit behavioral changes, particularly a decrease in "novelty seeking". It's been proposed that toxiplasma infection has actually changed human culture, since there is a correlation between countries with a high rate of toxiplasma infection and increased neuroticism, uncertainty avoidance, and "masculine" sex roles.

• Grasshoppers infected with the hairworm (Spinochordodes tellinii become more likely to jump into water where the hair worm reproduces. The parasite essentially makes its host suicidal to further its own reproduction.

• Some trematodes that infect the brackish water crustacean, gammaridean anthropod cause changes in behavior that make the hosts more likely to move towards light and exhibit aberrant "suicidal" evasive behaviors. These behavioral changes make the infected crustacean more likely to be eaten by birds, which the trematode uses as a host for the next stage in its life cycle (pdf).

• Plasmodium, the cause of malaria, affects both its mosquito and animal hosts. Mosquitoes that drink plasmodium-infected blood initially become more cautious about finding another victim, giving plasmodium time to replicate. Once the plasmodium is infective, mosquitoes become more likely to bite more than one person in a night, and spend more time drinking blood. In turn, once a person is infected with plasmodium, he become more attractive to mosquitoes, continuing the life cycle of the parasite. (See "Malaria Parasite Makes You More Attractive (To Parasites)" New York Times, August 9, 2005). Plasmodium can also affect the nervous system. Infection of juvenile canaries with plasmodium affects the song control pathway in the brain, resulting in simpler songs as adults. (Pubmed).

Of course this research is fertile ground for science fiction. Parasites are often used as a crude form of brain control; the brain-controlling parasites in The Wrath of Khan or the brain slugs in Futurama, are examples of this.

Personally, I prefer microbes with more subtle and interesting behavioral effects. An example of such a story is David Brin's, "The Giving Plague", in which a virus that causes altruism infects the human population. You can read "The Giving Plague" on David Brin's web site.

What other influences might parasites and microbes have had on the human species? For speculation on the possible effects of retrovirus infection on human evolution, see Couturnix's musings on Greg Bear's Darwin's Radio and Darwin's Children, asking "Did a virus make you smart?".

The possibilities are really endless.

* For a more technical review, see Thomas et al. "Parasitic manipulation: where are we and where should we go?" Beav. Proc. 68: 185-199 (2005) (pdf)

(For cool photos, check out the CDC's parasite image library.)

----

coturnix said...

Hi - great blog. You may find this about malaria interesting. And you may find this list of essential science fiction interesting because much of it is "biological" SF.

(2 images)

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: robin (#0)

Parasites That Control Behavior

I *know* that, somehow, another organism that does this is the politician.

Pinguinite.com EcuadorTreasures.ec

Pinguinite  posted on  2008-01-20   12:06:33 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: Pinguinite (#1)

;)

Ron Paul for President - Join a Ron Paul Meetup group today!
The Revolution will not be televised!

I would rather be exposed to the inconveniences attending too much liberty than to those attending too small a degree of it. - Thomas Jefferson

robin  posted on  2008-01-20   12:12:35 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]