News and Research
Immune System
University Of Iowa Researchers Investigate Regulation
Of Immune System Memory
12-1-2000
IOWA CITY, Iowa – If a person's immune system successfully
fights off an infection, not only does that person recover,
but they also acquire immunity against re-infection by that
same pathogen. The ability of the immune system to remember
pathogens it has already defeated, and to respond rapidly
and effectively to them during future exposures, is the
basis of vaccination strategies.
University
of Iowa researchers, led by John Harty, Ph.D., associate
professor of microbiology, are making progress in understanding
how these complicated aspects of the immune response are
controlled. The UI team has found that two molecules, perforin
and interferon gamma, already known to participate in the
fight against infections, are also responsible for regulating
the size and nature of both the initial immune response
and the residual protective immunity. The research findings
were published in the Nov. 17 issue of the journal Science.
The lead author, Vladimir P. Badovinac, Ph.D., and co-author
Amy R. Tvinnereim, Ph.D., are both postdoctoral fellows
in Harty's lab.
"It
was thought that the only role for these molecules was to
enable T cells to directly or indirectly destroy infected
cells," Harty said. "We have identified another
role for the molecules, as regulators that control how many
T cells are generated in response to infection and how many
of these cells survive and contribute to immune memory."
Harty
added that this work reinforces a long-standing notion about
the immune system, that it is able to use the same molecule
for different functions.
"The
immune system has learned to use and modify existing systems
to do the jobs required to fight off infections," Harty
said.
|
|
When an active immune system is confronted by a new
foreign invader such as bacteria or a virus, it initially generates
large numbers of T cells specific for the infectious agent. These
expanded cells undergo a process known as differentiation and become
cells that can actively fight off infection. Once the infection is
cleared, the majority of the expanded cells die off. The surviving
10 percent are maintained as memory cells.
"This death stage is very important because there
are only so many cells that constitute the immune system. If you maintained
all the expanded cells from each encounter with a pathogen you would
rapidly use up your allotment of immune cells," Harty explained.
"The precise regulation of the death phase after the expansion
allows us to respond to many different pathogens without exhausting
our immune system."
Until very recently, researchers evaluating the nature
and strength of an immune response focused on antibody production.
Antibodies are molecules generated by the immune system to help fight
infection. They are easy to detect and quantify. In the last five
years, however, there has been a revolution in scientists' ability
to identify, count and assess the function of antigen-specific T cells
with high precision. Measuring these cells gives a much more accurate
assessment of an immune response to either an infection or a vaccine.
"I suspect that in the next few years we will
be able to use these tools to assess how good human vaccines actually
are," Harty said.
In the current studies, Harty and his colleagues used
these measuring techniques and previous research to set about carefully
measuring the levels of T cells during different stages of infection.
Investigating the immune response in mice, genetically engineered
to lack either or both molecules, the researchers elucidated the regulatory
roles of perforin and interferon gamma.
The mice were infected with Listeria monocytogenes,
a bacterial pathogen that causes food-borne infections in humans.
The studies showed that perforin controls the total number of T cells
initially generated in response to a pathogen, and interferon gamma
controls the process by which most of those cells are eliminated after
the infection is cleared. Interferon gamma also affects which parts
of the pathogen cause the immune system to respond.
The roles of these molecules did not change when the
researchers repeated the experiments using a virus as the infecting
agent even though viruses and bacteria interact with the host animal
in very different ways during an infection.
"This is very basic research aimed at understanding
how this very precisely orchestrated expansion and decline, and memory
phase of the immune system is controlled," Harty said. "Understanding
how the basic biology of the system is regulated provides insight
into how we might manipulate the system. In the case of these studies,
the ultimate goal would be to learn how to manipulate the levels of
T cell memory, which could result in better, more effective vaccinations."
Autoimmune diseases result from inappropriate activation
of certain T cell subsets, which recognize self-antigens as opposed
to pathogen antigens. Understanding how T cells are regulated could
also help scientists understand and possibly treat autoimmune conditions.
Funding for this research was provided by the National
Institutes of Health.
This
story has been adapted from a news release issued by University Of
Iowa, www.uiowa.edu.
Next
- Back to Strengthen Immune System
Research