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How diseases caused by parasites allowed a wider understanding of disease in general: my encounters with parasitology in Australia and elsewhere over the last 50 years.

Authors :
Clark, Ian A.
Source :
International Journal for Parasitology. Dec2021, Vol. 51 Issue 13/14, p1265-1276. 12p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

[Display omitted] • How a background in diagnostic cattle babesiosis led to the argument that excess TNF is the key to pathogenesis. • The author summarises also following TNF into innate immunity, neurophysiology and neurodegenerative diseases. • These advances in physiology and pathophysiology are still growing rapidly, leading to wide adoption of useful treatments. • Many of these steps can be illustrated and expanded upon in parasitic diseases. • This involvement in neurodegenerative disease is being highly illuminating about human nature and scruples in science. This is an account of how it can prove possible to carve a reasonable scientific career by following what brought most scientific thrill rather than pursue a safe, institution-directed, path. The fascination began when I noticed, quite unexpectedly, that the normal mouse immune response causes Babesia microti to die, en masse, inside circulating red cells. It eventuated that prior Bacillus Calmette Guerin infection caused the same outcome, even before the protozoal infection became patent. It also rendered mice quite immune, long term. I acquired an obsession about this telling us how little we know. Surrounded by basic immunologists, parasitologists and virologists in London, I had been given, in the days that funding was ample, the opportunity to follow any promising lead with a free hand. Through Bacillus Calmette Guerin, this meant stumbling through a set of phenomena that were in their infancies, and could be explained only through nebulous novel soluble mediators such as TNF, described the following year as causing the in vivo necrosis of tumours in mice. Beginning with malarial disease pathogenesis, I followed TNF wherever it led, into innate immunity, acute and chronic infections, neurophysiology and neurodegenerative diseases, in all of which states awareness of the role of this cytokine is still growing fast. Many of these steps can be illustrated and expanded upon in parasitic diseases. Covering the importance of TNF in the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative disease has proved to be highly illuminating, scientifically and otherwise. But the insights it has given me into understanding the temptations to which patent-owners can succumb when faced with opportunities to put money before people is not for the faint hearted. Clearly, parasitologists inhabit a much more common-good yet science-orientated, civilised, world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00207519
Volume :
51
Issue :
13/14
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
International Journal for Parasitology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
154142891
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpara.2021.10.002