Research
Immune System Boosting
Allergy-Producing Cells Are Also "Do-Gooders,"
Helping Stave Off Infections
DURHAM,
N.C. 7-7-1999 - Researchers at Duke University Medical
Center have discovered that mast cells -- the same cells
responsible for the miseries of allergy - also recognize
harmful bacteria such as Salmonella and dangerous strains
of E. coli and alert the immune system to destroy the
bacteria.
The researchers say the discovery, which appears in
the July 6 issue of the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Science, may lead to new ways to fight infections,
particularly in patients whose immune systems are compromised
during an organ transplant or HIV infection.
The research is supported by grants from the National
Institutes of Health and the Medical Research Council.
"For
years people have wondered why we have mast cells when
they seem to do nothing but cause misery for people
with allergy and asthma," said microbiologist Soman
Abraham, lead investigator of the study. "Now we've
shown that the mast cell has a crucial role in identifying
potentially dangerous bacteria and alerting the immune
system to destroy them."
The much maligned mast cells lie just beneath the surface
of virtually all body tissues that have contact with
the outside world: the skin, gut, nasal passages, lung
and urinary tract. For years mast cells seemed only
to be a sort of cry-wolf cell that overreact to the
inhalation of substances as benign as pollen grains
and release a flood of inflammatory molecules and histamine
- the bane of allergy sufferers.
But Abraham and his colleagues discovered a more subtle but powerful
role for mast cells. The researchers found a molecule called CD48
on the mast cell surface. CD48 recognizes a protein called FimH
on the tips of hair-like projections on many infectious bacteria.
This CD48-FimH connection triggers mast cells to alert the immune
system by releasing a substance called tumor necrosis factor alpha
(TNF-a), which is a type of early warning system of infection,
Abraham said.
"We
are bombarded with bacteria every day," Abraham said. "In healthy
people, mast cells seem to help clear the body of bacteria quickly,
so that you don't even know you've been infected. Only when you
get such a huge dose of bacteria that the mast cells can't cope
or when your immune system is compromised do the bacteria gain
a foothold."
Typically, mast cells are not activated by the beneficial bacteria
that inhabit the gut, because such bacteria colonize the surface
of the intestinal lining, he said. Only when bacteria become invasive,
burrowing into the gut lining, are the mast cells alerted.
The Duke scientists' discovery also appears to clear up a mystery
about the function of the CD48 protein. Although CD48 was discovered
more than 10 years ago as a protein that appears on the surface
of some white blood cells such as mast cells, its biological role
has not been clearly defined.
In their experiments, Abraham and his colleagues showed that antibodies
to CD48 blocked mast cells from recognizing bacteria and stopped
the mast cells from releasing the signaling molecule TNF-a in
the presence of bacteria. This finding led the researchers to
conclude that CD48 is a specific receptor on mast cells that recognizes
bacteria and triggers the release of TNF-a, which alerts the immune
system to destroy the bacteria.
The researchers will now try to find ways to beef up the mast
cells' ability to fight bacteria in people with weakened immune
systems, such as people infected by HIV or who are taking anti-rejection
drugs following organ transplantation. Such a strategy might be
a way to avoid overuse of traditional antibiotic treatment, said
Abraham.
"Now
that we know that CD48 is the important trigger, we can target
treatments that would trip that trigger to help boost the immune
system's ability to fight infection in people with immune deficiency,"
he added.
Ravi Malaviya, Zhimin Gao, Krishnan Thankavel and P. Anton van
der Merwe also contributed to the research.
Editor's
Note:
The original news release on the immune system can be found at
www.dukenews.duke.edu.
Note:
This story on the immune system has been adapted from a news release
issued by Duke University for journalists and other members of
the public. If you wish to quote from any part of this story,
please credit Duke University as the original source. The story
on the immune system was taken from Science Daily, www.sciencedaily.com.
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