http://www.corante.com/loom/archives/2006/01/17/the_return_of_the_puppet_masters.php

January 17, 2006

The Return of the Puppet Masters

Posted by Carl Zimmer

Are brain parasites altering the personalities of three billion people?
The question emerged a few years ago, and it shows no signs of going
away.

I first encountered this idea while working on my book Parasite Rex. I
was investigating the remarkable ability parasites have to manipulate
the behavior of their hosts. The lancet fluke Dicrocoelium dendriticum,
for example, forces its ant host to clamp itself to the tip of grass
blades, where a grazing mammal might eat it. It's in the fluke's
interest to get eaten, because only by getting into the gut of a sheep
or some other grazer can it complete its life cycle. Another fluke,
Euhaplorchis californiensis, causes infected fish to shimmy and jump,
greatly increasing the chance that wading birds will grab them.

Those parasites were weird enough, but then I got to know Toxoplasma
gondii. This single-celled parasite lives in the guts of cats,
sheddding eggs that can be picked up by rats and other animals that can
just so happen be eaten by cats. Toxoplasma forms cysts throughout its
intermediate host's body, including the brain. And yet a
Toxoplasma-ridden rat is perfectly healthy. That makes good sense for
the parasite, since a cat would not be particularly interested in
eating a dead rat. But scientists at Oxford discovered that the
parasite changes the rats in one subtle but vital way.

The scientists studied the rats in a six-foot by six-foot outdoor
enclosure. They used bricks to turn it into a maze of paths and cells.
In each corner of the enclosure they put a nest box along with a bowl
of food and water. On each the nests they added a few drops of a
particular odor. On one they added the scent of fresh straw bedding, on
another the bedding from a rat's nests, on another the scent of rabbit
urine, on another, the urine of a cat. When they set healthy rats loose
in the enclosure, the animals rooted around curiously and investigated
the nests. But when they came across the cat odor, they shied away and
never returned to that corner. This was no surprise: the odor of a cat
triggers a sudden shift in the chemistry of rat brains that brings on
intense anxiety. (When researchers test anti-anxiety drugs on rats,
they use a whiff of cat urine to make them panic.) The anxiety attack
made the healthy rats shy away from the odor and in general makes them
leery of investigating new things. Better to lie low and stay alive.

Then the researchers put Toxoplasma-carrying rats in the enclosure.
Rats carrying the parasite are for the most part indistinguishable from
healthy ones. They can compete for mates just as well and have no
trouble feeding themselves. The only difference, the researchers found,
is that they are more likely to get themselves killed. The scent of a
cat in the enclosure didn't make them anxious, and they went about
their business as if nothing was bothering them. They would explore
around the odor at least as often as they did anywhere else in the
enclosure. In some cases, they even took a special interest in the spot
and came back to it over and over again.

The scientists speculated that Toxoplasma was secreted some substance
that was altering the patterns of brain activity in the rats. This
manipulation likely evolved through natural selection, since parasites
that were more likely to end up in cats would leave more offpsring.

The Oxford scientists knew that humans can be hosts to Toxoplasma, too.
People can become infected by its eggs by handling soil or kitty
litter. For most people, the infection causes no harm. Only if a
person's immune system is weak does Toxoplasma grow uncontrollably.
That's why pregnant women are advised not to handle kitty litter, and
why toxoplasmosis is a serious risk for people with AIDS. Otherwise,
the parasite lives quietly in people's bodies (and brains). It's
estimated that about half of all people on Earth are infected with
Toxoplasma.

Given that human and rat brains have a lot of similarities (they share
the same basic anatomy and use the same neurotransmitters), a question
naturally arose: if Toxoplasma can alter the behavior of a rat, could
it alter a human? Obviously, this manipulation would not do the
parasite any good as an adaptation, since it's pretty rare for a human
to be devoured by a cat. But it could still have an effect.

Some scientists believe that Toxoplasma changes the personality of its
human hosts, bringing different shifts to men and women. Parasitologist
Jaroslav Flegr of Charles University in Prague administered
psychological questionnaires to people infected with Toxoplasma and
controls. Those infected, he found, show a small, but statistically
significant, tendency to be more self-reproaching and insecure.
Paradoxically, infected women, on average, tend to be more outgoing and
warmhearted than controls, while infected men tend to be more jealous
and suspicious.

It's controversial work, disputed by many. But it attracted the
attention of <http://www.psychlaws.org/PressRoom/Bio1.htm>E. Fuller
Torrey of the Stanley Medical Research Institute in Bethesda, Maryland.
Torrey and his colleagues had noticed some intriguing links between
Toxoplasma and schizophrenia. Infection with the parasite has been
associated with damage to a certain class of neurons (astrocytes). So
has schizophrenia. Pregnant women with high levels of Toxoplasma
antibodies in their blood were more likely to give birth to children
who would later develop schizophrenia. Torrey lays out more links in
this 2003 paper. While none is a smoking gun, they are certainly food
for thought. It's conceivable that exposure to Toxoplasma causes subtle
changes in most people's personality, but in a small minority, it has
more devastating effects.

A year later, Torrey and his colleagues discovered one more fascinating
link. They raised human cells in Petri dishes and infected them with
Toxoplasma. Then they dosed the cells with a variety of drugs used to
treat schizophrenia. Several of the drugs--most notably
haloperidol--blocked the growth of the parasite.

So Fuller and the Oxford scientists joined forces to find an answer to
the next logical question: can drugs used to treat schizophrenia help a
parasite-crazed rat? They now report their results in the Proceedings
of the Royal Society of London (press release). They ran the original
tests on 49 more rats. Once again, parasitized rats lost their healthy
fear of cats. Then the researchers treated the rats with haloperidol
and several other anti-psychotic drugs. They found that the drugs made
the rats more scared. They also found that the antipsychotics were as
effective as pyrimethamine, a drug that is specifically used to
eliminate Toxoplasma.

There's plenty left to do to turn these results into a full-blown
explanation of parasites and personalities. For example, what is
Toxoplasma releasing into brains to manipulate its hosts? And how does
that substance give rise to schizophrenia in some humans? And even if
the hypothesis does hold up, it would only account for some cases of
schizophrenia, while the cause of others would remain undiscovered. But
still...the idea that parasites are tinkering with humanity's
personality--perhaps even giving rise to cultural diversity--is taking
over my head like a bad case of Toxoplasma.




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