Tag Archives: gondii

Mind-Altering Parasite May Make Infected People More Attractive, Study Suggests

The brain-hijacking parasite Toxoplasma gondii seems to be almost everywhere. The microscopic invader is thought to infect up to 50 percent of people, and a range of studies suggests it may alter human behavior, in addition to that of many other animals.

 

The parasite has been linked with a large range of neurological disorders, including schizophrenia and psychotic episodes, and scientists keep uncovering more mysterious effects that may result from infection.

In one such new study, researchers found that men and women infected by the parasite ended up being rated as more attractive and healthier-looking than non-infected individuals.

On the face of it, that might sound strange and unlikely. But hypothetically speaking, the phenomenon could make sense from an evolutionary biology standpoint, scientists say.

Above: Composite images of 10 Toxoplasma-infected women and men (a), beside 10 composite images of 10 non-infected women and men (b).

Amidst the many neurobiological changes T. gondii infection appears to bring about in its hosts, researchers hypothesize some of the effects may occasionally benefit infected animals – which might then benefit the parasite too, by subsequently helping to spur its own transmission prospects.

“In one study, Toxoplasma-infected male rats were perceived as more sexually attractive and were preferred as sexual partners by non-infected females,” researchers explain in a new paper led by first author and biologist Javier Borráz-León from the University of Turku in Finland.

 

Much research has been devoted to investigating whether similar effects can be seen in human cases of T. gondii infection.

The evidence is far from clear, but some evidence suggests infected men have higher levels of testosterone than non-infected men.

Arguably, men with higher levels of testosterone could be more likely to become infected by the parasite in the first place, through greater levels of risk-taking behavior associated with the hormone.

An alternative view, however, is that the parasite might be capable of subtly altering its host phenotype, manipulating chemicals in the animal’s body, such as neurotransmitters and hormones, for its own subsequent ends.

Those alterations could be far-reaching, Borráz-León and his team suggest.

“Some sexually transmitted parasites, such as T. gondii, may produce changes in the appearance and behavior of the human host, either as a by-product of the infection or as the result of the manipulation of the parasite to increase its spread to new hosts,” the researchers write.

To test this hypothesis, the researchers compared 35 people (22 men, 13 women) infected with T. gondii against 178 people (86 men, 92 women) who did not carry the parasite.

 

All the participants (including the infected) were nonetheless healthy college students, who had previously had their blood tested for another study investigating T. gondii.

Following a number of different tests involving the participants – including surveys, physical measurements, and visual assessments, the researchers found Toxoplasma-infected subjects had significantly lower facial fluctuating asymmetry than the non-infected people.

Fluctuating asymmetry is a measure of deviation from symmetrical features, with lower levels of asymmetry (ie. higher symmetry) being linked with better physical health, good genes, and attractiveness, among other things.

In addition, women carrying the parasite were found to have lower body mass and lower BMI than non-infected women, and they reported both higher self-perceived attractiveness and a higher number of sexual partners.

In a separate experiment, a group of 205 independent volunteers rated photographs of the participants’ faces, and the raters found the infected participants looked both significantly more attractive and healthier than the non-infected participants.

Interpreting the results, the researchers say it’s possible that T. gondii infection might produce changes in the facial symmetry of its hosts through changes in endocrinological variables, such as testosterone levels.

 

Further, the parasite could also be influencing metabolic rate in hosts, nudging infected people in ways that might influence their health and attractiveness perceptions.

That said, all of this is speculation at this point, and the team acknowledges other interpretations are viable too, including the idea that highly symmetrical, attractive people might somehow better afford the physiological costs related to parasitism, which in other regards are considered a burden to health.

As for which interpretation is correct, it’s impossible to say for sure based on this one study alone, and the researchers acknowledge that the small sample size of their experiment is a limiting factor for its statistical analysis.

For that reason, future studies with greater numbers of participants will be needed to confirm or deny their overall hypothesis.

But maybe – just maybe, they say – this perplexing parasite isn’t necessarily our enemy after all.

“It is possible that the apparently non-pathological and potentially beneficial interactions between T. gondii and some of its intermediate hosts, such as rats and humans, are the result of co-evolutionary strategies that benefit, or at least do not harm, the fitness of both the parasite and the host,” the researchers write.

The findings are reported in PeerJ.

 

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Annoying Cat Parasite Has Again Been Linked to Psychotic Episodes, But Only in Men

A ubiquitous parasite estimated to infect millions of people around the world has been linked with schizophrenia and a host of neurological disorders, but the evidence hasn’t always been clear.

 

While there are a number of studies linking the ‘mind-altering’ parasite Toxoplasma gondii with altered behavior or weird patterns in human activity, there are also data debunking the association.

Now, a new study led by first author and psychiatry resident Vincent Paquin from McGill University in Canada could help to explain this parasitic paradox – while going some way to identifying where the apparent dangers of T. gondii may actually lie.

In addition to contaminated food or water (including undercooked meat), the protozoan parasite T. gondii can be transmitted to humans through exposure to feces from an infected domestic cat, with a study in 1995 first observing a link between cat ownership in childhood and risk of mental illness later developing in adulthood.

However, other studies since have failed to replicate the cat ownership link, suggesting there might be more to the association than simply owning a cat.

“Domestic cats generally become infected with the parasite by feeding on rodents, and will only be contagious during the days or weeks that follow,” Paquin and his co-authors write in their new paper.

 

“Hence, specifying whether the cat was known to hunt rodents might provide a better proxy for probable exposure to T. gondii compared to cat ownership alone.”

In other words, as Paquin explains, cats themselves do not guarantee parasitic exposure, but rodent-hunting cats (i.e., cats that are allowed outside, as opposed to indoor-only pets) would probably be more likely to come into contact with T. gondii in the outdoor environment.

Hypothetically speaking, they might then transmit the infection to children, who could go on to develop psychological issues in adulthood, as identified in some studies, potentially through effects on the immune system.

To examine this hypothetical chain of transmission, the researchers surveyed approximately 2,200 participants in Montreal, asking them questions about childhood cat ownership, and measuring their frequency of psychotic experiences, alongside other questions about their personal history, such as how much they moved house during childhood, experiences with head trauma, history of smoking, and so on.

In analyzing the responses, the team observed that male participants who had owned a rodent-hunting cat during childhood showed an increased risk of having psychotic experiences in their adulthood; female respondents did not have the same link.

 

People who owned indoor-only cats during childhood (or no cat at all) did not show the same increased risk, which the team said was “consistent with our hypothesis based on the life cycle of T. gondii as the putative mechanism of this association”.

However, other factors captured in the survey also seemed to influence the respondents’ risk for psychotic experience, including smoking, frequency of residential moves in childhood or adolescence, and a history of head trauma, which Paquin says suggests “synergistic effects of these factors”, beyond just parasitic infection alone.

While the study has a number of limitations – including that all the data from the survey were self-reported – the team says their findings illustrate the importance of examining interactions among different kinds of environmental exposures, which may in the future help us to identify with greater accuracy where problems from T. gondii exposure are more likely to arise.

“These are small pieces of evidence but it’s interesting to consider that there might be combinations of risk factors at play,” Paquin told Medscape Medical News.

“And even if the magnitude of the risk is small at the individual level, cats and T. gondii are so present in our society that if we add up all these small potential effects then it becomes a potential public health question.”

The findings are reported in Journal of Psychiatric Research.

 



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