Research
Biological Warfare
| Article
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If
you are concerned about anthrax, it will not kill you
instantly so having a healthy immune system might give
you more time to get medical attention if you are exposed. |
Researchers Make Progress In Understanding Anthrax Resistance
October
2, 2001 -- Researchers have discovered that certain strains
of mice are resistant to anthrax toxin because they have
slightly different versions of a molecular motor protein
that is involved in transporting molecules within immune
system cells called macrophages. Presumably, the different
forms of the protein are either more effective at protecting
macrophages or less effective at facilitating the damaging
effects of the toxin, say the scientists.
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Their
finding may help researchers understand how anthrax wreaks damage
in macrophages. The research may also aid efforts to protect humans
against the deadly anthrax spores, which have the potential to
be used in biological weapons.
In
an article published in the October 2001 issue of Current Biology,
Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator William F. Dietrich
and his colleagues report that the protein produced by the gene
Kif1C exists in slightly different forms, or polymorphisms, in
mice. Dietrich and colleagues at Harvard Medical School collaborated
with researchers at the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research.
"While
the effects of anthrax lethal toxin on cells are quite complicated,
the primary impact of the toxin is on the body's macrophages,"
said Dietrich. "The rest of the physiological impact of the disease
on humans and animals seems to be secondary to those effects.
The bacterium has evolved this mode of attack since, as a key
weapon in the body's innate immune system, macrophages would gobble
up the bacteria. Wiping out this first line of defense allows
the bacteria to proliferate unchecked."
"Our
finding in mice represents a new insight into a specific mechanism
of toxin action in a well-defined model," said Dietrich. "Since
this biology is conserved across species, we believe that studying
this mechanism in mice will tell us a lot about the infection
process in other species, including humans."
According to Dietrich, previous studies by other researchers had
shown that the differences in anthrax resistance among mouse strains
were not due to differences in the uptake of the toxin by macrophages.
In previous experiments, Dietrich and his colleagues used genetic
techniques to map the resistance gene to an area, or locus, of
mouse chromosome 11, but they had not pinpointed the specific
gene.
"In
this latest work -- with considerable help from our colleagues
at the Whitehead Institute -- we used DNA sequencing and both
the mouse and human genome databases to pick out the genes in
that region," said Dietrich. "Once we identified those genes,
we searched through each gene, looking for sequence differences
between susceptible and resistant strains that could account for
the differences in anthrax toxin resistance."
The researchers found that the differences between susceptible
and resistant strains were caused by missense polymorphisms in
the gene Kif1C. Missense polymorphisms represent single nucleotide
changes in the gene that can subtly affect the functioning of
the protein for which it codes, said Dietrich. Different forms
of the same gene are known as alleles. Thus, the scientists set
out to show that the resistant alleles of the Kif1C gene did,
indeed, increase resistance to the toxin in macrophages.
"The
most convincing of these experiments were those in which we inserted
a resistant allele of Kif1C into susceptible macrophages and made
them become more resistant to the anthrax lethal toxin," said
Dietrich.
The researchers also treated resistant macrophages with the drug,
brefeldin A, which is known to prevent the Kif1C protein from
reaching its usual destination in the cell. This treatment induced
susceptibility to the toxin in resistant macrophages. And in other
experiments, the scientists showed that uptake of the toxin was
normal in resistant cells, demonstrating that the toxin cleaved
one of its normal protein targets -- called map kinase kinase
-- in the macrophages.
Kif1C codes for a transport protein related to kinesins, which
are known to carry molecular cargo along cellular highways, called
microtubules. Dietrich speculates that the polymorphisms in the
Kif1C gene alter the protein's ability to carry cargo involved
in the macrophage's response to the anthrax toxin.
"Research
by other groups has indicated that anthrax toxin kills macrophages
by inducing a runaway reaction called an oxidative burst," said
Dietrich. "We speculate that this kinesin protein might be transporting
either the elements that are part of this oxidative burst, or
the actual oxidative compounds themselves. Or, the protein may
be ensuring the prompt and appropriate delivery of compounds that
protect the macrophage against its own oxidative bursts.
"So,
while the subtle mutations that we see in Kif1C probably don't
affect the macrophages in their normal functioning, the decrease
in efficiency during the stress of intoxication by the anthrax
toxin can mean the difference between death and survival of the
macrophage." Further studies should clarify the effects of the
polymorphisms and yield even more insight into the effects of
the toxin, he said.
"This
work represents the first concrete connection between a molecule
inside the cell and a direct effect of lethal factor on whether
the cells live or die," said Dietrich. "And understanding such
effects are important to know if we are to learn how to fight
susceptibility to anthrax." While Dietrich does not see immediate
clinical benefits from the new findings, he does see the beginning
of an important research pathway.
"We
intend to look for these variations in human populations; to figure
out what cargo this protein is carrying, and to learn why Kif1C
is activated under anthrax intoxication," he said. "Once we understand
such phenomena, we might be able to work toward clinical applications
in terms of better diagnostics and treatments."
Note:
This story on anthrax and macrophages has been adapted from a
news release issued by Howard Hughes Medical Institute for journalists
and other members of the public. If you wish to quote from any
part of this story, please credit Howard Hughes Medical Institute
as the original source. This story on anthrax and macrophages
was taken from Science Daily, www.sciencedaily.com.
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