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Home / New Zealand

Weird Science: Can we accurately forecast death?

Jamie Morton
By Jamie Morton
Multimedia Journalist·NZ Herald·
17 Aug, 2018 05:00 PM5 mins to read

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Studying the fruit fly may lead to an accurate way to predict death days before it happens. Photo / 123RF

Studying the fruit fly may lead to an accurate way to predict death days before it happens. Photo / 123RF

Kiwi scientists may have found a way to accurately calculate death days before it happens - at least in the humble fruit fly.

University of Auckland researcher Jia Zhao has been using the miniscule flies into research on the circadian clock, and discovered a molecular marker that can help forecast the animal's death several days before.

The circadian clock generates the daily rhythms in most organisms, is affected by time and diminishes with advancing age.

"We are interested in the circadian clock which you and I and every animal has," said Zhao's supervisor, Dr James Cheeseman.

"It controls everything from behaviour to physiology. The primary implication in this study is that death, at least in flies, can be reliably predicted in clock gene expression.

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"We used the flies as a model because we can monitor the circadian clock rhythms in the living flies right down to cycling of individual clock genes."

The study looked specifically at two circadian clock genes, which have similar counterparts in humans, and how they change in the days immediately preceding death.

The fruit fly was chosen because it had a short life cycle and shared a similar circadian clock to humans.

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While breakdown of the clock in behaviour had been observed before, no one has tested clock gene expression.

When one of the two genes started to increase, it began to lose rhythmicity - signalling that the fly was going to die in four days.

"We hypothesise that it's the break-down in communication between the peripheral clock cells which causes this," Zhao said.

"The flies don't have to be old to show this pattern, it's a marker in young flies as well as old."

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More importantly, the fly provided a model for the ageing of clocks more generally - and had implications for other animals and humans.

Don't eat this cheese

Speaking of ageing, scientists have discovered what might be the world's most matured block of cheese.

The tomb of Ptahmes, mayor of Memphis in Egypt during the 13th century BC, was initially unearthed in 1885.

After being lost again under drifting sands, it was rediscovered in 2010, and archeologists found broken jars at the site a few years later.

One jar contained a solidified whitish mass, as well as canvas fabric that might have covered the jar or been used to preserve its contents.

Analysis later revealed it to be a dairy product made from cow milk and sheep or goat milk.

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The characteristics of the canvas fabric, which indicated it was suitable for containing a solid rather than a liquid, and the absence of other specific markers, supported the conclusion that the dairy product was a solid cheese.

But that wasn't all they discovered.

Other peptides in the food sample suggested it was contaminated with a bacterium that causes brucellosis, a potentially deadly disease which spreads from animals to people, typically from eating unpasteurised dairy products.

If the team's preliminary analysis is confirmed, the sample would represent the earliest reported biomolecular evidence of the disease.

Tarantula venom to fight children's disease

Aussie scientists think they've found a secret weapon to use against a childhood disease - inside the venom of a tarantula. Photo / 123RF
Aussie scientists think they've found a secret weapon to use against a childhood disease - inside the venom of a tarantula. Photo / 123RF

Aussie scientists think they've found a secret weapon to use against a childhood disease - inside the venom of a tarantula.

Dravet syndrome is a catastrophic epilepsy affecting young children before their first birthday.

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Children live with a range of very serious symptoms including intellectual disabilities and multiple daily seizures, and the disease can result in early death.

Now, using a key ingredient isolated from venomous tarantula venom, University of Queensland scientists have discovered an effective treatment.

Dravet syndrome is caused by a mutation in a gene that produces a protein critical for calming electrical activity in the brain.

Patients with Dravet syndrome only have half the normal amount of this protein,  meaning the brain is overactive, which results in seizures and the other features of Dravet syndrome.

"We reasoned that if we could just make the remaining protein work harder, it would effectively pick up the slack – much like a cyclist on a tandem bicycle can help her exhausted passenger by pedalling harder to maintain speed," Professor Steven Petrou said.

Before treatment, young Dravet mice displayed reduced activity in a specific type of brain cell whose job it is to reduce overall brain activity.

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"After applying the compound from the spider venom to nerve cells from the brains of Dravet mice we saw their activity immediately return to normal.

"Infusion into the brains of the Dravet mice not only restored normal brain function within minutes but over three days, we noted a dramatic reduction in seizures in the mice and increased survival. Every single untreated mouse died."

The team's results show that it may be possible to treat this previously intractable epilepsy by directly targeting the faulty gene.

The scientists are hopeful that the remaining technical challenges can be overcome, offering new hope to Dravet families.

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