Researchers in Edinburgh part of £2 million award to tackle widespread African cattle disease

Scientists are beginning a £2 million project to better understand a livestock disease that causes widespread economic hardship in sub-Saharan Africa.

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Herdsmen in Africa

An international team led by Edinburgh researchers, will seek to learn how trypanosome parasites – spread by biting tsetse flies – cause long term infections in cattle. The disease is known locally as nagana, derived from the Zulu word for ‘useless’, which highlights its impact on affected animals. In humans, related parasites cause the disease sleeping sickness.

The research, which will build on more than 40 years of study, and will focus on the two most prevalent species of parasite behind nagana in cattle – Trypanosoma congolense and Trypanosoma vivax.

Sleeping sickness parasites are known to be masters of disguise. Once in the bloodstream, they can change the proteins on their surface to avoid being recognised and destroyed by the immune system.

Researchers will aim to improve their understanding of how the parasite operates in the real world compared with lab-based studies, and to develop novel ideas for prevention and treatment.

Scientists at the Universities of Edinburgh, Glasgow, Liverpool, and in Lisbon, Heidelberg and Baltimore will pool their expertise to discover how these livestock parasites establish long-term infections through immune evasion and maximise their chances of spread. The project is funded by the Wellcome Trust.

Professor Keith Matthews, of the University of Edinburgh’s School of Biological Sciences, said:

“We think these important livestock trypanosomes are doing things very differently in cattle compared with those parasites that cause infection in people.

Our collaboration has the potential to identify vulnerable points in the parasite’s defences that could be targeted using drug therapy or even vaccines – something previously considered impossible. The consequences for economic improvement in sub Saharan Africa could be enormous.”

Dr Achim Schnaufer in the School of Biological Sciences, and Dr Liam Morrison at the Roslin Institute, are also part of the  new research programme.

For further information, please contact:

Catriona Kelly, Press & PR Office, tel 0131 651 4401, email Catriona.Kelly@ed.ac.uk