Toxoplasma

Guided by Parasites: Toxoplasma Modified Humans

by Tobias on June 4, 2010

Above is a ~20 minute (absolutely worth every minute) interview with the leading researcher, Dr. Robert Sapolsky, in the study of Toxoplasma & its effects on humans. This is a must see. [click here to read the full text of the interview]

“…this is a protozoan parasite that knows more about the neurobiology of anxiety and fear than 25,000 neuroscientists standing on each other’s shoulders…” – Dr. Robert Sapolsky

Toxoplasma (Toxoplasma gondii) [Toxo] was first observed in 1908. You may have heard of it as the crazy parasite that makes rats attracted to cats.  This, in its own right, is astonishing, interesting, & bizarre. It has also been widely known that pregnant women should stay clear of cat scat & other sources for Toxo as it can adversely affect the development of the fetus.

Dr. Robert Sopalsky at Stanford has taken this link to humans further & has been studying, in detail, how it is affecting humans with some startling observations, but we’ll get to that later.

Dr. Sapolsky, Professor of Neurology and Neurological Sciences, is known for his work studying the biological effects that stress has on primates, including humans. In addition to his research at Stanford, he annually spends time in Kenya as a research associate at the National Museums of Kenya researching the effects of stress on a population of baboons for well over 20 years.  His research has lead to hundreds of scientific publications & six books including the acclaimed Why Zebras Don’t Get Ulcers, Monkeyluv: And Other Essays on Our Lives as Animals, A Primate’s Memoir: A Neuroscientist’s Unconventional Life Among the Baboons, and others.

Toxo Life Cycle (click for high res)

In order to understand how it affects humans, one must first understand how it affects its desired hosts: cats and rodents.

“Toxo knows how to hijack the sexual reward pathway.” – Dr. Sapolsky

For a parasitic protozoa it has a remarkably complicated and fascinating life cycle. The quick summary is that Toxo can only sexually reproduce in the gut of a cat. The cat then excretes Toxo in its feces which is then consumed by the intermediate hosts (e.g., a rat). Once in the rat Toxo’s goal is to then be eaten by a cat so it can be fruitful and multiply, but as I mentioned, this can only take place in the cat’s gut. Toxo’s goal is to get the rat eaten by a cat.

Toxo could get the desired effect through a whole sort of seemingly obvious ways; e.g., Make the rat hard to run so it is easier for a cat to catch it.  Instead it takes a far more interesting approach:

Toxo generates cysts in the brain of the rat. These cysts take over the fear center of the brain, but specifically the fear of predators. Common fear sources for rodents (e.g., bright lights, open spaces, etc.) still operate perfectly well in an infected rat, but now they are no longer afraid of cat piss.

That alone would be cool enough, but Toxo takes it one step further. When Toxo is going about futzing with the fear center of the brain it also goes into the sexual excitement part of the brain. It hijacks the incoming Fear of Cat Piss™ and instead diverts the signal to the Barry White™ center of the brain.

“Somehow, this damn parasite knows how to make cat urine smell sexually arousing to rodents, and they go and check it out. Totally amazing.” – Dr. Sapolsky

The rat is now sexually attracted to cat piss!

(This is a fetish that gets you eaten by your predator and rats clearly do not have any safe words with cats.)

On top of all this, Toxo apparently has been hanging out in hipster bar bathrooms doing lines of blow off of some cat’s ass. The parasite has the mammalian gene for creating dopamine (which I have discussed in brevity previously):

Cocaine works on the dopamine system, all sorts of other euphoriants do. Dopamine is about pleasure, attraction and anticipation. And the Toxo genome has the mammalian gene for making the stuff. It’s got a little tail on the gene that targets, specifies, that when this is turned into the actual enzyme, it gets secreted out of the Toxo and into neurons. This parasite doesn’t need to learn how to make neurons act as if they are pleasurably anticipatory; it takes over the brain chemistry of it all on its own.” -Dr. Sapolsky

This is all good fun for fucking with the behavior of rat brains, but is there anything that crosses over into the human realm? This is the question that Dr. Sapolsky’s team has been working on.

What does Toxo do to humans? And there’s some interesting stuff there that’s reminiscent of what’s going on in rodents.” – Dr. Sapolsky

It seems that humans aren’t having love affairs with cat piss. Instead, it appears that humans are having the fear center of their brain circuit bent causing some interesting findings.

A small literature is coming out now reporting neuropsychological testing on men who are Toxo-infected, showing that they get a little bit impulsive. … And then the truly astonishing thing: two different groups independently have reported that people who are Toxo-infected have three to four times the likelihood of being killed in car accidents involving reckless speeding.” – Dr. Sapolsky

In a very specific example, Dr. Sapolsky goes on to state that motorcyclists have a high probability of being infected with Toxo. I wonder if my friends who have a love for motorcycles grew up with cats and therefore had a higher probability of being exposed.

“…if you ever get organs from a motorcycle accident death, check the organs for Toxo. I don’t know why, but you find a lot of Toxo.” – Dr. Sapolksy

It is stunning that human behavior is being modified by a parasite that wasn’t even intended for humans (“off label use” perhaps?). This appears to be pure happenstance.

I am left wondering, “What if there is a parasite out there that specifically uses humans as their hosts?

If a simple organism can make such precise modifications to a rat’s brain, it is not far fetched to think that this is already going on inside our heads on a far larger scale.  It would appear to me that we have only scratched the surface.

It appears that we are far more affected by our surroundings, things we ingest, exposure to compounds, (e.g.,Epigenetics) and now parasites than many originally thought. Our DNA appears to be the hand we are dealt, but how those cards are played seem to be under the control of far more players than many had originally assumed.

I have some sideline questions I would love to have answered:

•How do you test for toxo?
(I would love to be able to find out if I have any in my system, for example.)

•How does one test for dopamine activity in the brain without resorting to trepanation?

For those interested in more of Dr. Sapolsky’s works, which I highly recomend, here is a video of a talk he gave at Stanford last year about “The Uniqueness of Humans“.  It is an absolutely wonderful talk that equally knocks us down a peg or two at the same time it rises us like a yeasty bread such that the pegs that are missing are now merely holes to push tasty cream cheese into.

Comments (57)

Loading... Logging you in...
  • Logged in as
As a motorcyclist who grew up with cats I'd be very interested in being tested also.

Very interesting.
Great article, there is a correlation between Cat Ladies and toxo as well as schizophrenia. All the correlations are interesting I cant wait for definitive science to aris eon this subject.
1 reply · active 382 weeks ago

Gentlemen, You Now Have a Medical Excuse for Speeding — bolty.net

[...] more on this subject, see Guided by Parasites: Toxoplasma Modified Humans (via BoingBoing) Related Posts:To ‘Stich or Not to ‘Stich I’ve been thinking a [...]
Easy to test for toxo. You have a test called a toxoplasma IgG drawn. If this antibody level is elevated, you were infected with toxo at some point in the past.
3 replies · active 772 weeks ago
danthelawyer's avatar

danthelawyer · 773 weeks ago

And then? Can it be treated in humans?
2 replies · active 342 weeks ago
you probably have toxo :) the proof is in the margins. hope you can preserve the staring cats synchronizing with the sapolsky video :)
1 reply · active 390 weeks ago
I work in pediatric infectious disease, and I've worked up several kids for Toxo infection. Toxo can be treated, but generally doesn't need to be. The meds have side effects and need to be taken for months. In some parts of the world a large proportion of the population are infected and apparently do just fine. It can cause problems in immunosuppressed people (HIV specifically) and in babies in the womb, when the eye and brain damage can be quite nasty.

Other things of interest: men specifically get stupid. Women tend to become more gregarious and attractive.

The Palo Alto lab is the world's best at diagnosing Toxo, and is able to fine-tune the timing of infection using avidity testing of the antibodies (so they can say whether the infection occurred within a few months, which can be helpful for managing pregnant women). The guy who runs the lab, Jack Remington, invented the test known as "The Remington test".
1 reply · active 772 weeks ago
Sounds like fun, do I have to eat the cat crap?
1 reply · active 382 weeks ago
I am left wondering, “What if there is a parasite out there that specifically uses humans as their hosts?”

Herpes. The "sleeping sickness" spirochete. Syphilis. Oh, you want multi-cellular parasites? How about religion? Scientology is surely a disease. So is pentecostal Christianity.

On another note, I remember reading that something like 50% of the human population of Brazil is infected with toxoplasmosis. Anybody have a referense?
2 replies · active 381 weeks ago

links for 2010-06-05 :: zota

[...] Guided by Parasites: Toxoplasma Modified Humans motorcyclists have a high probability of being infected with Toxo. Because their parents tend to have cats? Or because THE PARASITE RULES THEIR BRAINS, MAKING THEM FEARLESS? (tags: brain parasite paranoia) [...]
@Bob: Brazil has high seroprevalence rates, with a random screening indicating 70% prior infection rates amongst women of childbearing years. (Rey, Luis, and Isabel Ramalho, "Seroprevalence of toxoplasmosis in Fortaleza, Ceara, Brazil" Journal of the Sao Paulo Institute of Tropical Medicine (May 1999)).

In addition:

~15-20% of the US population has antibodies (Jones et al., "Toxoplasma gondii Infection in the United States, 1999-2000," Emerg Infect Dis (November 2003)), while France and Greece have previous infection rates of ~55% (cited in Cook et al, "Sources of toxoplasma infection in pregnant women: European multicentre case-control study," BMJ, (15 July 2000)).

Eastern Europe appears to have comparable rates, with a nonrandom sample in southeastern Romania indicating urban female seroprevalence of 48.1% and rural female seroprevalence of 70% (Olariu et al, "Prevalence of toxoplasma gondii antibodies among women of childbearing age in Timis County," Scientific Papers in Veterinary Medicine (Timisoara, Romania) (2008)). Without adding more citations, Asia and Africa also report high seroprevalence.
1 reply · active 359 weeks ago
Ongoing pharmaceutical research:

Discovery shows promise as a new treatment for toxoplasmosis (2003)
http://www.innovations-report.com/html/reports/me...

Newly Developed Anti-Malarial Medicine Treats Toxoplasmosis: (2008) http://www.newswise.com/articles/newly-developed-...

Treatment of toxoplasmic lymphadenitis with co-trimoxazole: double-blind, randomized clinical trial: (2010) http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20194044
1 reply · active 772 weeks ago
eltimbalino's avatar

eltimbalino · 773 weeks ago

I first heard about Toxoplasma effecting human behavior in a book by Scott Westerfeld called Peeps(2005). Amongst this rollicking good fiction are scattered factual pages about parasites that add weight to the story. If you like fast well told grabs about the fascinating world of parasites, it's a must read.

http://scottwesterfeld.com/blog/books/peeps/
1 reply · active 438 weeks ago
Cute summary of the neurobiology of Toxo, but Sapolsky neglects to mention that tyrosine hydroxylase (the dopamine synthesis enzyme) is present in many organisms outside mammals. First off there are lots of invertebrate animals who use dopamine in their nervous systems and secondly, tyrosine hydroxylase has lots of other functions like cross linking the cuticle of newly molted insects or defending against pathogens. This is more an example of convergent evolution where another species has likely duplicated an existing TH encoding gene and adapted to produce dopamine.
2 replies · active less than 1 minute ago
A science fiction story that explores the topic of mind-altering parasites in humans (and which mentions Toxo in passing):
http://www.davidwgoldman.com/Invasion_of_the_Patt...
As a woman who has serious eye damage from toxo, I'm very interested in these articles as they are published. The studies so far have shown very different reactions in men vs. women with toxo, and it makes me wonder what else this parasite might be responsible for.
2 replies · active 772 weeks ago
My father and uncle both have suffered from toxo. It can attack nearly any organ in the body; in my father's case, it attacked his eye. Unfortunately the only treatment in the 1980's for toxo involved heavy doses of steroids; the effectiveness was marginal at best as he still lost approximately 80% of his vision in one eye and about 25% in the other. The steroids caused a lot of other problems which have shown up for the past three decades.
Before my grandmother passed away about ten years, it was understood in my family not to let her know that she had indeed passed the disease along during pregnancy.
1 reply · active 773 weeks ago
So what does toxo do to cat brains?
1 reply · active less than 1 minute ago
Toxoplasmosis can cause a rip-roaring brain infection and death in cats. It can also cause liver disease but most of the time it is a transient infection of the intestines.

Toxo Modified Humans

[...] This paper lead me to spend a lot of time putting this together: Guided by Parasites: Toxoplasma Modified Humans [...]

Toxo modifizierte Menschen

[...] Guided by Parasites – Toxoplasma Modified Humans [...]

The Wildlife Society Blog » Fascinating Video on Toxoplasma and Feral Cats

[...] http://tobiastenney.com/2010/06/toxoplasma/ for the full video and [...]

It’s not my fault I’m crazy | Tuisligh

[...] So somewhere along the line I come into this with my screwed up fear system. Not many people are researching Toxoplasmosis, in spite of the fact the 65 million Americans are estimated to have the protozoan (and possibly one in seven Irish people). This is because very few people have active infections as I had this January. One man who is researching this is a guy called Dr. Robert Sapolsky. Some things he had stated recently taken from this website : [...]
Very interesting!! I have active Toxo in my eye, just got over my latest infection. And I have a thing for travelling to dangerous countries on my own... not sure if they're related. I certainly don't drive cars fast. I've written my view on this on my blog. I'm going to start writing more on the subject as it bothers me to have a condition, and know so little about it.
Neurocyclist's avatar

Neurocyclist · 764 weeks ago

I'd like to see more evidence of the motorcyclist-toxoplasmosis link before I go out and get tested...

Post a new comment

Comments by

Previous post:

Next post: