The Best Australian Science Writing 2012 (28 page)

Homeopaths claim the mirror image of a substance's effect gets stronger with dilution. Our everyday experience is that when you dilute something, it gets weaker. Homeopaths claim that, contrary to our experience and the laws of physics, substances get stronger as they become more diluted. Or, rather than getting stronger, the mirror image of their effect gets stronger. So caffeine, a stimulant, somehow becomes an effective sleep aid. Homeopaths have a number of different, mutually contradictory explanations for this. One of the most popular is that water retains a ‘memory' of the substances in it.

Now if this were true, water would retain the memory of all the substances that have ever been in it, and the effects would be rather obvious to all. We can see why the dilution can't work by considering caffeine again. We know that caffeine makes us more alert by stopping the action of a brain hormone. Diluting caffeine out won't make the brain hormone work harder; nor will a ‘memory' of caffeine.

Homeopaths' explanations are incoherent and require
everything we know about how the body works to be wrong. Any apparent effect of homoeopathy is purely due to the placebo effect, where people feel subjectively better just because we are paying attention to them. But the underlying disease doesn't get any better, and we should never substitute real medicine for placebos.

* * * * *

We can talk about theory all day, but what if there were evidence that homeopathy actually worked? That would trump any discussion of theory. Clinical trials have been done on homeopathy, and the results aren't good. Now, not all clinical trials are equal, but good-quality clinical trials show homeopathic remedies have no effect – whether for asthma, attention deficit disorder or side effects of cancer medication. (For some diseases, such as dementia, there are simply no good clinical trials to evaluate.)

The most recent evaluation of the evidence for homeopathy was the UK government's Evidence Check 2: Homeopathy. After reviewing the best scientific evidence and submissions from stakeholders, the review concluded that homeopathy showed no evidence of efficacy.

The NHMRC is Australia's peak body for evaluating and promoting best health practice, so it's entirely appropriate for it to rule on the effectiveness of homeopathy.

Its rulings have several implications – doctors will be reluctant to prescribe remedies that have no proven efficacy, for instance, and insurance companies will be reluctant to pay out on them. Australian adults have the right to choose treatments for their ailments (or choose not to be treated). But they need access to the best available evidence so their choices can be well informed.

The tragic story of Penelope Dingle shows what happens when people don't have such access.

Healing arts

Defending science

The Aussie mozzie posse

Ashley Hay

They flutter against the fine mesh that traps them in a small white bucket; tiny shimmers of darkness with white stripes on their six spindly legs and a white lyre shape on their thorax. These delicate creatures are
Aedes aegypti
, the mosquitoes responsible for the spread of yellow fever, the Chikungunya virus and dengue fever, a disease that annually affects more than 100 million people worldwide.

Crouched in a welcome patch of shade, away from the Cairns summer sun, I peel back the silky white gauze, blow across the open mouth of the container and shake it, stepping back as the 40 captives make their way into the air.

Cairns is Australia's dengue fever capital; the 2009–10 dengue season set a new record when 28 people imported the disease from overseas. By early January, this season's number had passed 50. Yet here we are, releasing more
Aedes
– more dengue carriers, or vectors – into the world.

But these are no ordinary mosquitoes. They're pioneers in a world-first population-replacement program, set free to interbreed with local
Aedes
and pass on their Trojan-horse bacterial infection.
Aedes aegypti
mosquitoes infected with the
Wolbachia bacterium
cannot transmit dengue. Which, given that dengue
has no known vaccine and no specific treatment (and that mosquitoes can develop resistance to most insecticides used against them), makes this an unprecedented and potentially revolutionary scientific experiment.

A white van crawls along the kerb, followed by a white car. Both are emblazoned with the words ‘Eliminate Dengue: Our Challenge' and a huge picture of the stripy-legged
Aedes
. It's 9.30am and the team moves from site to site, releasing a batch of mosquitoes at each – behind a fence, in a carport or on the edge of a footpath. The numbers work out at about ten mosquitoes per household in the two trial sites near Cairns.

In the car sits the man who is leading the project, Professor Scott O'Neill, based at the University of Queensland (UQ)and the progenitor of the idea that the tiny
Wolbachia
microbe, which measures only two-thousandths of a millimetre at most, might be a big enough weapon to take on the scourge of dengue. The 48-year-old combines affability with a certain immediacy and precision, and has an occasional American lilt to his voice, the result of a decade spent at Yale and the University of Illinois.

‘I wake up at three in the morning and I think, we could crash and burn any day,' O'Neill confessed two months before the release. ‘Science is like that. We could have a bad result, and that would kill the whole thing. We're realists about that. But while it's going well, we're enjoying the world.'

Now, in January, we peel the gauze back from another bucket, blow across it to tempt the mosquitoes out with the carbon dioxide on our breath, and watch these tiny organisms launch themselves, perhaps into scientific history.

For a discipline stereotyped in terms of individual research, science often has a fabulously accumulative architecture. It's about ingredients, says one of this project's members, Professor Ary Hoffmann, from the University of Melbourne. And it's about stories that intersect and fly off on tangents – sometimes towards
dead ends, sometimes towards spectacular breakthroughs. It's about persistence, creativity and, quite often, serendipity that might be decades, even centuries, in the making.

This story really starts in the late 18th century with the expansion of global maritime traffic that probably brought
Aedes aegypti
to this part of the world. In the 1920s and 1930s, the parasitic microbe
Wolbachia
was discovered and named. ‘At first, researchers wanted to see if it was a pathogen [infectious agent],' says O'Neill. ‘They injected it into mice and things, discovered it wasn't, and so everyone lost interest in it.'

In 1971, an American PhD student, Janice Yen, realised that a
Wolbachia
-infected male mosquito crossed with an uninfected female yielded no viable eggs. She submitted her PhD and disappeared from the world of science. Her research sat unused, waiting.

Then, in the mid 1980s, a young Australian researcher, Ary Hoffmann, arrived at the University of California to work with a scientist called Michael Turelli. ‘I was interested in whether fruit flies that bred on oranges were different from flies that bred on apples,' says Hoffmann. ‘So I went to southern California and collected flies from oranges, and I went to northern California and collected flies from apples, and I did some crosses. And I observed, to my absolute horror, that the crosses were fine in one direction – with males from the north and females from the south you got plenty of offspring. But from the opposite cross, there was none at all. I thought, What's going on here? This is crazy.

Going back to ‘some very old literature', Hoffmann saw that the same thing had been observed in mosquitoes. ‘That's when I first thought, It's this weird thing called
Wolbachia
, which wasn't supposed to be anywhere but in mosquitoes.'

Over the following years, he watched
Wolbachia
spread itself through the native Californian fruit flies,
Drosophila simulans
, moving about 100km a year. It was the first time anyone had
watched an organism drive itself into the genetic fabric of another in a natural setting.

Scott O'Neill's trajectory in the story began when, as a young boy, he met an uncle who was an academic. The man had ‘this room of books, his study, and it had this beautiful smell', he remembers. ‘I was entranced.' He chose to study science, and after completing his PhD in entomology at UQ, he moved to the US, where he tried to find a way to modify
Wolbachia
to carry new genetic material into mosquito populations that would prevent them spreading disease.

Then, in 1997, researchers from the California Institute of Technology discovered that one strain of
Wolbachia
shortened the life span of the organisms it infected. ‘Immediately,' says O'Neill, ‘the penny dropped.'

After someone contracts dengue, they will pass the virus to any
Aedes aegypti
that bites them three to four days later. After another eight to ten days, that mosquito will relay the dengue virus on to anyone it bites. The dengue life cycle, therefore, takes about a fortnight, so if an
Aedes aegypti
mosquito contracting dengue couldn't live the next eight to ten days to bite someone else, it would break the cycle of transmission.

‘If we could take this bacteria that shortens life span and put it into a mosquito, we wouldn't have to do anything else,' O'Neill explains. He won funding to investigate this approach, but couldn't make it work.

Then the last ingredient came into play. In January 2003, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation donated US$200 million to a series of ‘Grand Challenges in Global Health'. Two and a half years later, Scott O'Neill, back in Brisbane at UQ, won funding under the Gateses' initiative to ‘modify mosquito population age structure to eliminate dengue transmission'.

‘We had a bit of a chest-tightening moment, thinking, They've given us all this money; now we have to make it work – this thing
we haven't been able to do for six years,' says O'Neill. ‘Still, for the first time, we could think about what we really needed to try to do. For the first time in my career, I had enough money to actually give it a go.'

He had close to US$7 million, five years and a team spanning five countries.
Wolbachia
occurs naturally in a wide range of insects – perhaps as many as 70 per cent – from pantry moths and fruit flies to the beautiful green-and-yellow Cairns birdwing butterfly. It also occurs naturally in other species of
Aedes
mosquitoes. How hard could it be to get it into
aegypti
?

When Conor McMeniman joined the O'Neill lab at UQ as a PhD student in 2004, people had been trying – and failing – to get one promisingly life-shortening strain of
Wolbachia
, called wMelPop, into
Aedes aegypti
for more than five years.

Over more than 18 months, McMeniman injected about 10,000 mosquito embryos. For his mosquitoes to lay eggs, they needed a blood meal – they had to bite a human. ‘I used to feed them on myself,' he says, matter-of-factly. ‘Five days before we needed eggs, I stuck my arm in the cage.' The mosquitoes fed, he'd put them in test tubes in the dark ‘for about an hour, and they'd dump their eggs'. The eggs needed to be injected within 90 minutes.

In his first six experiments, the
Wolbachia
survived injection into the egg, but somewhere between the first and the third generation of the mosquitoes he bred from those eggs, the infection would be lost. ‘This was a fairly frustrating but tantalising sort of thing,' he says. ‘After a while, it became a bit obsessive.' Having lost nearly all six colonies, he thought, Well, I'll give it one last shot – and that just happened to be the one that took hold. It might have been a refinement in his technique, a slight change in the
Wolbachia
or, as he suggests, ‘just luck'. The results were published in 2009 in the journal
Science
. McMeniman was awarded his doctorate and a fellowship at Rockefeller University in New York.

In Cairns, at James Cook University, two 20m long purpose-built cages were decked out to re-create the dark, dank
Aedes
habitat found under any elevated Queenslander house to allow the mosquitoes to be tested in an environment that was slightly more realistic than a lab cage.

It had always been assumed that, once released, the infected mosquitoes would perpetuate themselves in the field. There was just one problem: in Melbourne, Ary Hoffmann's team discovered that while these short-lived wMelPop mosquitoes ‘could spread pretty well in the wet season, in the dry season, they came to a grinding halt'. For the infection to be perpetuated, releases would have to be ongoing. ‘It was one of those moments,' says Hoffmann, ‘where we thought, Gosh, this project is about to hit some serious trouble …'

And then, another turning point. When the team began injecting
Wolbachia
into mosquitoes that were already carrying dengue, they found they didn't transmit dengue at all. ‘That was my serendipity moment,' says O'Neill. ‘If we put
Wolbachia
into
aegypti
, they couldn't transmit pathogens to humans.'

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