Research
Immune System Boosting
UCSF Researchers Unravel Mystery Of TB Infection;
Findings Significant For Future Development Of Vaccine
10-7-1999
The ability of the tuberculosis microbe to outsmart
a healthy immune system and cause disease has long puzzled
medical scientists, but now researchers at the University
of California, San Francisco have discovered one of
the organism's most skillful means of protecting itself.
Study
findings, reported in the new issue (October 1) of the
Journal of Immunology, are especially significant for
future development of new types of TB vaccines and possibly
for more effective drugs.
The
microbe, known as Mycobacterium tuberculosis, combines
good survival technique with the right timing, said
senior investigator Joel Ernst, MD, a UCSF professor
of medicine, who specializes in infectious disease and
also treats patients at San Francisco General Hospital
Medical Center .
From their previous studies, the researchers knew that
the organism lodges in the macrophage cells of the immune
system, where infectious areas are sealed off in a kind
of fibrous shell. The mission of the macrophages is
to kill off foreign invaders, and they do so by taking
their cues from an intricate chain of biochemical signals
from other components of the immune system.
Working in the laboratory with human cells, the UCSF
team analyzed this process of interactions at the cellular
and molecular level. The researchers found that M. tuberculosis
demonstrates its timing expertise by showing restraint,
stepping in to disrupt the process only in the final
phase. The microbe interrupts the activity of a protein
called STAT1, which in turn blocks the ability of macrophages
to respond to a crucial molecule of the immune system
termed interferon gamma. Without the effective action
of interferon gamma, the macrophages become inert and
cannot kill M. tuberculosis.
The result is that M. tuberculosis survives despite development
of a cellular immune response, Ernst explained.
"The
study findings explain how the immune system of an otherwise healthy
person is unable to destroy the bacteria that cause tuberculosis.
Now that we know this, the development of vaccines and the immunotherapy
of tuberculosis can be approached more rationally," he said.
The UCSF study is a prime example of how basic science research
is applied to the study of disease, Ernst added. Studies done
elsewhere determined the cellular and signaling pathways initiated
by interferon gamma, providing the UCSF team with the tools to
carry research one step further. "With this information, we traced
the pathway every step of the way, identifying the impact of M.
tuberculosis," he said.
UCSF pulmonary specialist Philip Hopewell, MD, who also is associate
dean of the UCSF School of Medicine at SFGHMC, has been active
in TB research and control for 25 years. Reviewing the study results
he said, "The only way that the global tuberculosis epidemic will
be controlled is through the use of an effective vaccine. These
findings bring us closer to understanding the immune response
to infection with the tubercle bacillus and, thus, provide important
information upon which vaccine development will depend."
In a person, the TB microbe causes a chronic bacterial infection
that usually affects the lungs but also attacks other organs.
It is spread through the air when a person with active TB disease
of the lungs or larynx coughs, sneezes, or shouts. It is most
prevalent in densely populated areas and the inner-city where
people often live in close quarters.
Worldwide, an estimated 1.5 billion persons are infected with
TB and about 3 million die each year from the disease, so implications
for controlling infection are enormous, Ernst emphasized. Areas
with the highest rates of TB infection include Sub-Saharan Africa,
India, China, and the Philippines.
An estimated 15 million Americans are infected, although only
about 10 percent of those infected ever develop the disease. An
estimated 10-12 percent of the San Francisco population is infected.
Factors contributing to TB infection rates in the U.S. include
the HIV/AIDS epidemic, because persons with HIV are particularly
vulnerable to infection; increased numbers of immigrants from
countries with a high incidence of TB and crowded housing; and
an increased population of homeless and injection drug users.
Study co-investigators were Li-Min Ting, PhD, post-doctoral scholar;
Anne C. Kim, UCSF second-year medical student; and Ashok Cattamanchi,
now a medical student in Chicago, all of the UCSF Rosalind Russell
Arthritis Research Laboratory and the Loewenstein Laboratory for
Mycobacterial Research at SFGHMC.
The research was supported by grants from the National Institutes
of Health, the University of California AIDS Research Program,
and Berlex Biosciences, Richmond, Calif.
Editor's
Note: The original news
release can be found at www.ucsf.edu.
Note:
This story has been adapted from a news release issued by University
Of California, San Francisco for journalists and other members
of the public. If you wish to quote from any part of this story,
please credit University Of California, San Francisco as the original
source. This story was taken from Science Daily, www.sciencedaily.com.
Comment:
We are publishing this research to aid in our understanding
of how the immune system works. Sally Robertson
Next
- Back
to Immune System Boosting Research |