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Immune System Disease
Fighting Ability
Researchers Find How Tuberculosis Bacterium Evades Detection
By Immune System
7-16-2001
CLEVELAND -- Tuberculosis (TB) is one of the scourges of
humans, infecting about one-third of the world's population,
or two billion people. It kills an estimated eight million
people annually. And while a vaccine exists for children,
an effective vaccine for adults remains elusive.
A
new study published in the July 15 issue of the "Journal
of Immunology" may unlock a door in the search for
a vaccine. The study from Case Western Reserve University's
School of Medicine and University Hospitals of Cleveland
details how the tuberculosis bacterium evades detection
by the body's immune system.
An
infectious disease, TB is caused by a bacterium called Mycobacterium
tuberculosis, which can be transmitted through the air.
Left untreated, TB can cause the development of cavities
in the lungs and other tissues, leading to a variety of
symptoms, including severe cough (at times with blood),
fever, weight loss, and can become life-threatening.
Growth
of the bacteria in the lungs of infected persons is controlled
in many cases, but not eradicated, by the immune system.
However, when immunity fails because of malnutrition, aging,
or HIV infection, the bacteria grow, causing active TB of
the lung. When an infection invades the body, the immune
system is called upon to control and stop the infection.
Important soldiers in the war against infection are scavenger
cells called macrophages which chew up invading bacteria
and deliver pieces of them to white blood cells named CD4
T cells.
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Macrophages have a specialized set of molecules, called
MHC-II (which stands for class II major histocompatibility complex).
This set of molecules is used to present the pieces of invading bacteria
to CD4 cells. These pieces, called antigens, are the way CD4 cells
can recognize and eliminate invading bacteria.
The CWRU/UHC researchers have discovered that the
TB bacterium stops the immune system from using this important piece
of equipment from its arsenal. The bacterium inhibits the specialized
MHC-II molecules by taking up residence in the macrophages and making
a large protein in abundant quantities which interferes with MHC-II
production.
Furthermore, the bacterium does this while engaging
a macrophage receptor normally used for protection against a large
number of infectious diseases. By employing that receptor and inhibiting
MHC-II molecules, the bacterium evades detection.
"M. tuberculosis uses a critical receptor to
prevent recognition by the human immune system, which allows it to
survive in one of the most important cells of the immune system,"
said Henry Boom, professor of medicine and director of the Tuberculosis
Research Unit at CWRU. "Better understanding of how the TB interferes
with the immune system is necessary for developing vaccines against
it," he added. "Targeting molecules of M. tuberculosis that
interfere with the immune response may allow us to make an effective
vaccine to prevent tuberculosis in adults," Boom said. "In
order to stem the tide of tuberculosis in the world during the next
10 years, an effective vaccine is urgently needed."
While this study was conducted in mice, the researchers
are currently testing their findings in human tissues. Boom shares
senior author credit on the study with Clifford Harding, professor
of pathology.
Sharing lead authorship are two students in the CWRU
Medical Scientist Training Program, Erika Noss and Rish Pai. Other
authors include Timothy Sellati and Justin Radolf from University
of Connecticut Health Center; John Belisle from Colorado State University;
and Douglas Golenbock from Boston Medical Center.
This story has been adapted from a news release issued
by Case Western Reserve University, www.cwru.edu.
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