Livin' on the MDedge

Boring is good. Boring is right. Boring is … interesting


 

Who’s afraid of cancer? Not C. elegans

And now, we bring you part 2 of our ongoing series: Creatures that can diagnose cancer. Last week, we discovered that ants are well on their way to replacing dogs in our medical labs and in our hearts. This week, we present the even-more-lovable nematode.

A “worm-on-a-chip” device tracks nematodes’ movements toward odor molecules produced by lung cancer cells. Courtesy Nari Jang

The soil-dwelling nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, which is less than 1 mm long, is known to be “attracted or repelled by certain odors, so we came up with an idea that the roundworm could be used to detect lung cancer,” Shin Sik Choi, PhD, of Myongji University in South Korea, who is the project’s principal investigator, said in a statement on Eurekalert.

Dr. Choi’s team created a “worm-on-a-chip” that allowed the nematodes to choose between a drop of culture media from lung cancer cells and media from normal lung fibroblasts. An hour after being placed in the chip’s central chamber, more nematodes had crawled toward the lung cancer media than the normal-cell sample.

The investigators estimate that the device is about 70% effective at detecting cancer cells, but “they hope to increase both the accuracy and sensitivity of the method by using worms that were previously exposed to cancer cell media and therefore have a ‘memory’ of cancer-specific odor molecules,” according to the statement from the American Chemical Society.

Since C. elegans is easy to grow in a lab and, apparently, easy to train, the researchers hope that the worm-on-a-chip can become a quick, easy, economical, and noninvasive cancer screen.

So watch out cancer, because we never bet against the creepy crawlies.

Mosquitoes have us figured out

We are nearing mosquito season; quite possibly the most annoying and itchy time of the year. We stock up on bottles of bug spray, but somehow we still get bite after bite. It appears that mosquitoes are basically able to ignore our bug sprays, which explains why we’re still covered in bites after the Fourth of July fireworks. It turns out mosquitoes are more complex than we thought for such tiny creatures.

A mosquito Courtesy Jim Gathany/CDC

There’s plenty of research on the best ways to keep mosquitoes away, because not only are they incredibly annoying, but they also carry potentially harmful diseases. In a recent experiment, researchers used mosquitoes that were genetically modified to have an excessive amount of an odor receptor called AgOR2, which responds to the smell of humans.

“AgOR2 overexpression threw a wrench in the whole system by inactivating olfactory receptors in these mosquitoes,” Christopher Potter, PhD, associate professor of neuroscience at Johns Hopkins University, said in a written statement.

After testing how these genetically modified mosquitoes reacted to some of the common smells of bug spray such as lemongrass, they discovered that it’s easy for the mosquitoes to ignore the smell. We wish it were that easy for us to ignore that chemically fruity smell.

Researchers continue to work hard to figure out how to repel mosquitoes and we’re rooting for them as summer approaches, despite the mosquito’s status as a creepy crawly.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Urine for a new vaccine alternative
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Make America beautiful: Support mask mandates
MDedge Emergency Medicine
We’re dying to tell you about fatigability
MDedge Emergency Medicine
If you give a mouse a genetically engineered bitcoin wallet
MDedge Emergency Medicine
If you’ve got 3 seconds, then you’ve got time to work out
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Tiny hitchhikers like to ride in the trunk
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Your heart doesn’t like peas any more than you do
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Tastier chocolate may be healthier chocolate
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Raise a glass to speed up the brain’s aging process
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Is cancer testing going to the dogs? Nope, ants
MDedge Emergency Medicine