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Corante Blogs examine, through the eyes of leading observers, analysts, thinkers, and doers, critical themes and memes in technology, business, law, science, and culture.

The Press Will Be Outsourced Before Stopped

Vin Crosbie, on the challenges, financial and otherwise, that newspaper publishers are facing: "The real problem, Mr. Newspaperman, isn't that your content isn't online or isn't online with multimedia. It's your content. Specifically, it's what you report, which stories you publish, and how you publish them to people, who, by the way, have very different individual interests. The problem is the content you're giving them, stupid; not the platform its on."
by Vin Crosbie in Rebuilding Media

Travels In Numerica Deserta

There's a problem in the drug industry that people have recognized for some years, but we're not that much closer to dealing with it than we were then. We keep coming up with these technologies and techniques which seem as if they might be able to help us with some of our nastiest problems - I'm talking about genomics in all its guises, and metabolic profiling, and naturally the various high-throughput screening platforms, and others. But whether these are helping or not (and opinions sure do vary), one thing that they all have in common is that they generate enormous heaps of data.
by Derek Lowe in In the Pipeline

Disrobing the Emperor: The online “user experience” isn't much of one

Now that the Web labor market is saturated and Web design a static profession, it's not surprising that 'user experience' designers and researchers who've spent their careers online are looking for new worlds to conquer. Some are returning to the “old media” as directors and producers. More are now doing offline consulting (service experience design, social policy design, exhibition design, and so on) under the 'user experience' aegis. They argue that the lessons they've learned on the Web can be applied to phenomena in the physical and social worlds. But there are enormous differences...
by Bob Jacobson in Total Experience

Second Life: What are the real numbers?

Clay Shirky, in deconstructing Second Life hype: "Second Life is heading towards two million users. Except it isn’t, really... I suspect Second Life is largely a 'Try Me' virus, where reports of a strange and wonderful new thing draw the masses to log in and try it, but whose ability to retain anything but a fraction of those users is limited. The pattern of a Try Me virus is a rapid spread of first time users, most of whom drop out quickly, with most of the dropouts becoming immune to later use."
by Clay Shirky in Many-to-Many

The democratisation of everything

Over the last few years we've seen old barriers to creativity coming down, one after the other. New technologies and services makes it trivial to publish text, whether by blog or by print-on-demand. Digital photography has democratised a previously expensive hobby. And we're seeing the barriers to movie-making crumble, with affordable high-quality cameras and video hosting provided by YouTube or Google Video and their ilk... Music making has long been easy for anyone to engage in, but technology has made high-quality recording possible without specialised equipment, and the internet has revolutionised distribution, drastically disintermediating the music industry... What's left? Software maybe? Or maybe not."
by Suw Charman in Strange Attractor

RNA Interference: Film at Eleven

Derek Lowe on the news that the Nobel Prize for medicine has gone to Craig Mello and Andrew Fire for their breakthrough work: "RNA interference is probably going to have a long climb before it starts curing many diseases, because many of those problems are even tougher than usual in its case. That doesn't take away from the discovery, though, any more than the complications of off-target effects take away from it when you talk about RNAi's research uses in cell culture. The fact that RNA interference is trickier than it first looked, in vivo or in vitro, is only to be expected. What breakthrough isn't?"
by Derek Lowe in In the Pipeline

PVP and the Honorable Enemy

Andrew Phelps: "Recently my WoW guild has been having a bit of a debate on the merits of Player-vs.-Player (PvP) within Azeroth. My personal opinion on this is that PvP has its merits, and can be incredible fun, but the system within WoW is horridly, horribly broken. It takes into account the concept of the battle, but battle without consequence, without emotive context, and most importantly, without honor..."

From later in the piece: "When I talk about this with people (thus far anyway) I typically get one of two responses, either 'yeah, right on!' or 'hey, it’s war, and war isn’t honorable – grow the hell up'. There is a lot to be said for that argument – but the problem is that war in the real historical world has very different constraints that are utterly absent from fantasized worlds..."
by Andrew Phelps in Got Game

Rats Rule, Right?

Derek Lowe: "So, you're developing a drug candidate. You've settled on what looks like a good compound - it has the activity you want in your mouse model of the disease, it's not too hard to make, and it's not toxic. Everything looks fine. Except. . .one slight problem. Although the compound has good blood levels in the mouse and in the dog, in rats it's terrible. For some reason, it just doesn't get up there. Probably some foul metabolic pathway peculiar to rats (whose innards are adapted, after all, for dealing with every kind of garbage that comes along). So, is this a problem?.."
by Derek Lowe in In the Pipeline

Really BAD customer experience at Albertsons Market

Bob Jacobson, on shopping at his local Albertsons supermarket where he had "one of the worst customer experiences" of his life: "Say what you will about the Safeway chain or the Birkenstock billionaires who charge through the roof for Whole Foods' organic fare, they know how to create shopping environments that create a more pleasurable experience, at its best (as at Whole Foods) quite enjoyable. Even the warehouses like Costco and its smaller counterpart, Smart & Final, do just fine: they have no pretentions, but neither do they dump virtual garbage on the consumer merely to create another trivial revenue stream, all for the sake of promotions in the marketing department..."
by Strange Attractor in Total Experience

The Guardian's "Comment is Free"

Kevin Anderson: "First off, I want to say that I really admire the ambition of the Guardian Unlimited’s Comment is Free. It is one of the boldest statements made by any media company that participation needs to be central to a radical revamp of traditional content strategies... It is, therfore, not hugely surprising to find that Comment is Free is having a few teething troubles..."
by Kevin Anderson in strange
In the Pipeline: Don't miss Derek Lowe's excellent commentary on drug discovery and the pharma industry in general at In the Pipeline

The Loom

« The Big Picture | Main | Malaria For Brains »

August 22, 2005

The Tubercular Hominid

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Posted by Carl Zimmer

New branches on the tree of life have just turned up in Africa. Some are cuter than others.

In Madagascar, our primate family was enlarged by two adorable species of mouse lemurs. Meanwhile, other scientists made an uglier discovery in the small country of Djibouti, in the Horn of Africa. They found a surprising diversity of bacteria that cause tuberculosis. When most people think about the joys of biodiversity, they probably don't think about the hidden expanses of parasites waiting to be discovered. But in cases such as this one, they can have a fascinating story to tell--one that may prove to be important to the welfare of our own species.

Tuberculosis is, like malaria and HIV, an infectious disease so vast in its success that it's hard to fathom. Every second someone somewhere in the world gets infected with the bacteria Mycobacterium tuberculosis, and each year TB kills about 1.75 million people. Many scientists have wondered how long these bacteria have been attacking the lungs of our ancestors. Hippocrates described cases that appear to be tuberculosis, and ancient mummies show signs of the disease. For earlier chapters in the evolution of TB, scientists have begun to turn to the bacteria's DNA.

The first studies pointed to a relatively recent origin of the disease. The bacteria that scientists sampled turned out to have nearly identical DNA. If a long time had passed since the common ancestor of living strains of TB, then they would have expected to find more mutations setting the strains off from one another. Instead, they esimated that a single successful ancestor gave rise to all current strains about 20,000 to 35,000 years ago.

But French researchers have found that people in Djibouti carry strains of TB that are significantly different than anything seen before. They have many more genetic differences than have been found in human TB strains from anywhere else in the world. Yet they are more closely related to other human TB than to the Mycobacterium species that infect cattle and other animals. The scientists then turned the mutations of the Djibouti strains into a molecular clock. They estimate that the ancestor of today's human TB existed some three million years. The results have just been published in the new open access journal PLOS Pathogens.

If tuberculosis was infecting our ancestors three million years ago, it was infecting early, small-brained hominids. All of the hominids known from that time lived in Africa, and hominids would not be found outside the continent for over a million years. Our own species is believed to have evolved much later in Africa, and to have spread to Asia and Europe roughly 50,000 years ago. So it's telling that all these ancient strains are found in Africa, not far from some of the richest lodes of hominid fossils in Ethiopia. The genetic diversity of these bacteria reflects the genetic diversity of living Africans.

Some diseases are new to our species, and some are old enemies. HIV probably made the jump from chimpanzee to human in just the past century. Like other emerging diseases, its evolution is a reflection of our times. It probably is the result of roads being pushed through African rain forests for logging, allowing hunters to kill chimpanzees and sell the meat to a growing, increasingly mobile society. Other diseases appear to have gotten their start thanks to earlier opportunities. Yersinia pestis, the cause of bubonic plague, rapidly emerged a couple thousand years ago, probably taking advantage of flea-infested rats that were thriving in cramped communities. Malaria appears to have emerged a few thousand years before that, when early African farmers spend their days clearing forests and creating lots of standing water in which mosquitoes could breed, only to go to bed nearby and become easy targets for the insects.

The new study suggests that tuberculosis came long before them. But it apparently has not been with us forever--or even for five or ten million years. For some reason it appeared three million years ago, and it's intriguing think why. The new paper doesn't hazard a guess, but I'm reminded of a similar study I came across while researching my book Parasite Rex. It has to do with tapeworms.

Today tapeworms have a life cycle that take them between pigs or cows and humans, where they can grow up to 60 feet long in their intestines. In the 1940s, researchers proposed that the three tapeworm species that infect humans descend from ancestors which pioneered our guts when cattle and pigs were first domesticated some 10,000 years ago. But a close look at their DNA showed otherwise. Scientists found that the closest relatives of human tapeworms did not make relatives of cows or pigs their intermediate hosts. Instead, they lived inside East African herbivores such as antelopes, and made he lions and hyenas that kill them their final hosts. The researchers then looked at the amount of variation between the DNA from different species of tapeworms. According to the agricultural hypothesis, that variation should have pointed to a common ancestor 10,000 years ago. But the scientists concluded that this common ancestor could have lived as long as a million years ago.

The scientists proposed that tapeworms began adapting to our hominid ancestors when they began putting more meat in their diet. By scavenging or hunting on the East African savannas, our ancestors became an attractive new habitat for the tapeworms, and new species evolved that were specialized only to live inside us. Only hundreds of thousands of years later did they make cows and pigs their intermediate hosts.

Given TB's similar antiquity, I wonder if it may have made a similar leap. Many closely relatives to Mycobacterium tuberculosis live in bovids--cows and their relatives--which hominids might have encountered as they began to scavenge meat. Could a sick wildebeest have been our patient zero?

Still, the question remains: why is so much TB diversity hiding out in Djibouti, while one branch seems to have exploded about 30,000 years ago and spread around the world, such that today it makes up the vast majority of TB cases? The paper's authors hazard that this lineage spread out of Africa with the migration of humans to other parts of the world. That makes sense up to a point. The bacteria that cause ulcers, Helicobacter pylori, spread this way--so faithfully in fact that it acts as a marker for human migrations to different parts of the world. But the new TB 30,000 years ago was able to spread much more aggressively than the other strains, which apparently are still restricted to the region where they've been for millions of years. It's hard to understand what sort of social or ecological change could have created the conditions that would favor such a superior bug.

Neverthless, it may be possible to pinpoint how this new lineage evolved into such a killer by comparing it to the older strains. If scientists can identify its special weapon, they might be able to figure out how to attack it with a drug. Here, then, is one potential benefit of exploring the diveristy of parasites: you can learn how to fight the really nasty ones.

Comments (4) + TrackBacks (0) | Category: Evolution


COMMENTS

1. John S Bolton on August 22, 2005 04:58 PM writes...

They also warn that the assumption of stability of today's TB bacteria is not to be taken for granted; escape mutants are possible. TB is a tropical disease today, and likely started out that way. In between, though, TB came to be known as the white plague, on account of its association with the cities of Europe. In the 19th century there existed even virulent forms which killed people in less than a year. Unless our drugs and public health measures exterminated those forms once and for all, including even the genetic capacity of the bacteria to regenerate such varieties, shouldn't it be assumed that it could happen again? With several billion people infected, the chance for mutation favoring the virulent and efficiently spreading form would seem to be high. Tropical adapted populations are not specialized towards resisting TB, but towards resisting parasites against which, immediate hypersensitivity is the efficient response. Theory says that it has to be one or the other; or, if not, then science could be challenged to, and find, one individual who combines very high natural immediate and delayed hypersensitivity. That is, such that he could be genetically uncommonly resistant to both malaria and TB. This could be the difference between northern and tropical adapted populations, which has kept, and keeps, them distinct genetically.

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2. Judith Price on August 25, 2005 11:52 AM writes...

Might the single strain of TB found worldwide relate to the idea that only a very few peole walked out of Africa to spread humans around the world? Maybe only one of the fellows around the campfire was sick when they left home?

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3. daen on September 1, 2005 09:49 AM writes...

Fascinating stuff, Carl. Do you have any similar information or ideas on the evolutionary history of the leprosy bacillus M. leprae, tuberculosis's close cousin?

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4. 素人 on September 3, 2005 03:56 AM writes...

素人最高!!

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