Tracking leishmaniasis with new PCR test


Original story from The Hebrew University of Jerusalem (Israel).

A new study offers an innovative way to track the spread of leishmaniasis, a parasitic disease affecting both animals and humans.

Leishmaniasis, a parasitic disease transmitted by sand flies, has long challenged veterinarians and public health experts alike. Found in humans and animals across many parts of the world, the disease’s intricate transmission cycle involves numerous sand fly species and a wide range of wild and domestic reservoirs.

A recent study led by Gad Baneth of the Koret School of Veterinary Medicine, Robert H. Smith Faculty of Agriculture, Food and Environment, Hebrew University of Jerusalem (Israel) presents a breakthrough in how we track and understand this complexity.

Published in PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases, the research introduces a high-resolution melting (HRM) PCR-based technique that can simultaneously identify sand fly species, detect Leishmania parasites, and pinpoint the source of the insect’s blood meal, all from a single specimen. This innovative molecular approach replaces time-consuming traditional methods with a fast, cost-effective diagnostic system that offers near-complete accuracy.

“By uniting veterinary and public health surveillance, we can now trace the parasite’s journey from animal to insect to human with unprecedented precision,” explained Baneth. “This method transforms how we monitor zoonotic diseases in the field.”

The research team analyzed nearly 2,000 sand flies collected across Israel, identifying 12 distinct sand fly species, four species of Leishmania (L. major, L. tropica, L. infantum, L. donovani), and 25 different blood meal sources ranging from domestic cats and cows to rock hyraxes and hares. Their findings reveal distinct ecological zones: L. major and L. donovani vectors dominated the arid southern regions, while L. tropica and L. infantum were more common in the center and north.


Next-gen malaria vaccine overcomes major hurdle

Uncovering how the human immune system fights Plasmodium vivax could pave the way for the first effective vaccine against the most widespread form of malaria.


Interestingly, sand fly species were also found outside their historically recognized habitats, suggesting environmental or climatic shifts expanding transmission zones. The HRM system achieved 96.7% success in identifying blood meal sources, a vital advance for One Health studies that bridge veterinary and human epidemiology. Domestic cats, hyraxes, hares and cows accounted for more than half of all identified blood meals, underscoring the crucial role of animals in sustaining the disease’s life cycle.

Leishmaniasis is both a veterinary and human health concern, affecting dogs, cats and wildlife reservoirs alongside people. HRM technology’s ability to distinguish between species and trace infection patterns enables earlier intervention and targeted control strategies.

For veterinarians, it provides a diagnostic window into infection ecology, helping identify animal hosts that serve as silent reservoirs and improving outbreak prediction.

Baneth noted that “Rapid and precise identification of infected vectors and reservoir hosts allows us to anticipate emerging foci and protect both animal and human populations.”

This pioneering molecular toolkit not only enhances Israel’s surveillance of vector-borne diseases but also offers a model adaptable to other endemic regions. By merging molecular diagnostics with field ecology, the study marks a significant step forward in the fight against neglected tropical diseases that cross the animal–human divide.


This article has been republished from the following materials. Material may have been edited for length and house style. For further information, please contact the cited source. Our press release publishing policy can be accessed here.


  You might also be interested in...