Forum für Wissenschaft, Industrie und Wirtschaft

Hauptsponsoren:     Siemens  n-tv 
Datenbankrecherche:

Fachgebiet (optional):

 

Fighting TB might be a matter of 'flipping a switch' in immune response

24.06.2009
Scientists are focusing on a new concept in fighting airborne pathogens by manipulating what is called the “switching time,” the point at which a highly regulated immune response gives way to powerful cells that specialize in fighting a specific invading bug.

Anzeige

In the case of tuberculosis, Ohio State University researchers are using mathematical modeling to determine whether a change to the natural switching time would result in a more effective immune response. They also are analyzing which parts of the immune response are most important to striking a balance between properly timing the switch and completing the task at hand – killing the microbe.


The complex modeling takes into account the huge assortment of cells and molecules at work in the human immune response to Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the microbe that causes TB. The response to all airborne pathogens is particularly complicated because it takes place in the highly protective environment of the lung. Human lungs are programmed to minimize immune responses as a way to avoid inflammation, which could interfere with breathing.

The modeling suggests that the average switching time occurs about 50 days after tuberculosis invades the lung, which roughly coincides with clinical expectations that a skin test will turn up positive for TB between four and eight weeks after infection.

By that time, bacteria have settled in and are harder to kill, even with the more robust immune response. Because TB is highly evolved and adapted to the human host, the launch of the stronger immune response goes unnoticed in about 90 percent of infections.

With less adapted but virulent pathogens, on the other hand, an individual becomes acutely ill, and sometimes dies, when the switching time occurs. As the immune response kicks into high gear, toxic infection-fighting warrior cells cause what could be considered collateral damage by harming lung tissue at the same time that they kill the invading bugs.

The researchers say mathematical models that predict relationships and interactions in the immune response could guide planning for therapies that would be designed to either accelerate or slow the switching time, depending on the pathogen.

“A great problem in developing drugs and vaccines against airborne pathogens is this apparent bottleneck in the immune response and the inability to quickly and effectively eradicate microbes in the lung environment,” said Larry Schlesinger, professor of internal medicine and director of the division of infectious diseases at Ohio State and a senior author of the study. “Understanding that bottleneck is an important part of this paper, and brings new insight into how to override the problem with tuberculosis and other pathogens.”

The research is scheduled to appear in the online early edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

About 2 billion people worldwide are thought to be infected with TB. People who are infected can harbor the bacterium without symptoms for decades, but an estimated one in 10 will develop active disease characterized by a chronic cough and chest pain. Both active and latent infections are treated with a combination of antibiotics that patients take for at least six months.

In the event of infection, two immune responses occur: The innate immune response begins a fight against any pathogen. The acquired immune response follows, with components designed to attack the specific pathogen causing the infection. When that change occurs is referred to as the switching time.

At the point of infection in the lung, TB bacteria are absorbed by what are called alternatively activated macrophages. These macrophages activate specific molecules that make pieces of the bacteria visible to infection-fighting T cells, a process that triggers an eventual T-cell response and the recruitment of classically activated macrophages, those that are more effective at killing bacteria.

The mathematical modeling in this study simulates the entire cascade of events in the immune response to TB, setting the stage for testing what the outcome would be if changes were made along the way – for example, if a drug were developed to artificially inhibit or activate part of the process.

In this research, the scientists sought to determine what it would take to shorten the switching time and reduce the number of bacteria in the lung.

Two cytokines, interferon gamma and tumor necrosis factor alpha, are known participants in the conversion from one type of immune response to the other. Cytokines are proteins mobilized when the body is injured or has an infection, and often cause inflammation in their repair efforts.

Many previous studies testing interferon gamma’s potential as a TB therapy have suggested that the protein is effective in the fight, but isn’t effective enough on its own to treat the infection. The mathematical modeling simulating such a treatment reinforced these findings.

The model showed that early introduction of interferon gamma during the immune response would shorten the switching time and reduce the bacterial load, but would not completely clear bacteria from the lung after 100 days – a population referred to as the residual bacterial load. The researchers speculate that manually introducing one cytokine is not enough to optimize the signals needed to activate certain macrophages.

The findings suggest that interferon gamma might be one component of a cocktail approach to new TB therapies, the researchers said.

There would be a benefit to reducing that residual load of bacteria, Schlesinger noted. TB treatments take so long and currently require a cocktail of antibiotics specifically to address the long-term persistent bacteria in the lung and other parts of the body.

“If we could shorten the treatment for TB, that would be very powerful in breaking the transmission cycle,” said Schlesinger, also director of Ohio State’s Center for Microbial Interface Biology.

The precision of the modeling allows the researchers to simulate outcomes resulting from multiple tweaks to the values assigned to the various immune response activities.

“It’s like turning the knobs up and down on an equalizer, only in this case to figure out when the immune response and different mediators of that response are at the right levels to do their jobs – without blowing the speakers, so to speak,” said Judy Day, a postdoctoral researcher in Ohio State’s Mathematical Biosciences Institute and lead author of the study.

The researchers conducted a number of sensitivity tests to check the validity of the models. The models use what are considered ordinary differential equations, but finding the values to plug into those equations required an exhaustive search of previous research on tuberculosis.

“To pin down quantitatively what the effect of A is on B and C, we had to search the literature to find evidence of these parameters. When we didn’t find them, we had to make educated guesses and then subject them to sensitivity analysis,” said Avner Friedman, a senior author of the paper and Distinguished University Professor of mathematical and physical sciences at Ohio State.

Friedman, who was the founding director of the Mathematical Biosciences Institute, predicts this line of mathematical modeling of the immune response has paved the way for new research into combination therapies against a variety of pathogens.

“Switching time is a new concept. We will be talking about switching time in a few years about this disease, or that disease,” he said.

This research was supported by grants from the National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health.

Larry Schlesinger | Quelle: EurekAlert!
Weitere Informationen: www.osumc.edu

Weitere Nachrichten aus der Kategorie Biowissenschaften Chemie:

nachricht Mütterliche Antikörper behindern Impfschutz bei jungen Katzen
22.05.2012 | Paul-Ehrlich-Institut - Bundesinstitut für Impfstoffe und biomedizinische Arzneimittel

nachricht Der nukleare GAU ist wahrscheinlicher als gedacht
22.05.2012 | Max-Planck-Institut für Chemie

Alle Nachrichten aus der Kategorie Biowissenschaften Chemie >>>

Die aktuellsten Pressemeldungen zum Suchbegriff Innovation >>>


Die letzten 5 Focus-News des innovations-reports im Überblick:

Im Focus: Meilenstein in der Nanopartikel-Forschung: Nanopartikel-Testhandbuch setzt Standards


Unter Federführung der Empa erscheint ein neues Standardwerk, das die europäische Forschung an Nanopartikeln vereinheitlichen soll.

Exakte Laborvorschriften zur Herstellung definierter Nanopartikel und zu deren Analytik stellen die Arbeiten auf diesem Gebiet auf eine neue Grundlage und machen sie erstmals vergleichbar. Herausgeber ist Harald Krug, Leiter des Empa-Departements «Materials meet Life».

Das neue Standardwerk soll Schluss machen mit dem «babylonischen Sprachgewirr», das derzeit noch in der Nanoforschung ...

Im Focus: Frühdiagnostik bei Rheuma: SPECT zeigt Knochenveränderungen schon im Frühstadium


Bei rheumatischen Erkrankungen erlauben moderne bildgebende Verfahren weit mehr als nur die Darstellung der knöchernen Gelenkstrukturen.

Mit funktionellen Untersuchungsmethoden wie der hochauflösenden Einzelphotonen-Emissions-Computertomographie (SPECT) können pathologische Knochenumbauvorgänge bereits sehr früh nachgewiesen werden, mitunter schon zu einem Zeitpunkt, zu dem selbst die MRT-Diagnostik noch unauffällig ist. Eine Studie der Universitätsradiologie Düsseldorf, die jetzt auf dem 93. Deutschen Röntgenkongress vorgestellt wurde.

In der Rheumatologie hat sich in den letzten ...

Im Focus: Rizinusöl wirkt über einen G-Protein-gekoppelten Rezeptor


Wirkmechanismus eines der ältesten Arzneimittel der Menschheit aufgeklärt

Rizinusöl ist vor allem als effektives Abführmittel bekannt, wurde aber auch bereits in der Antike bei Schwangeren zur Förderung der Wehentätigkeit eingesetzt.

Erst jetzt ist es Wissenschaftlern vom Max-Planck-Institut für Herz- und Lungenforschung gelungen, die entscheidenden Details des Wirkmechanismus zu entschlüsseln. Verantwortlich ist demnach ein Rezeptor mit dem Namen EP3 auf ...

Im Focus: Gelenkige Schildkröte - Zwei neue Arten der Landschildkröte Kinixys in Afrika entdeckt


Pünktlich zum morgigen Weltschildkrötentag wird die Artenliste der Panzerträger um zwei Namen reicher.

Wissenschaftler des Senckenberg Forschungsinstitutes in Dresden haben gemeinsam mit einem internationalen Forscherteam zwei neue Arten der afrikanischen Gelenkschildkröte identifiziert. Die zugehörige Studie ist kürzlich im Fachjournal „Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research“ erschienen.

Gelenkschildkröten sind die Bewegungskünstler unter den landlebenden Schildkröten. Aufgrund eines Scharniers im Rückenpanzer können die in Afrika ...

Im Focus: Wichtige Rolle bei der Steuerung der postnatalen Neurogenese nachgewiesen


Eine Forschungsgruppe der Universität Ulm hat einen neuartigen molekularen Schalter im Gehirn identifiziert, der eine wichtige Rolle bei der Steuerung der postnatalen Neurogenese im Gyrus dentatus spielt, der Unterregion im Hippocampus, in der lebenslang Nervenzellen aus neuralen Stammzellen gebildet werden.

„Unsere Untersuchungen beschreiben erstmals einen neuen und letztlich unerwarteten Signalweg bei der Regulation der Neurogenese im Hippocampus“, sagt Professor Stefan Britsch, Direktor des Instituts für Molekulare und Zelluläre Anatomie, der die Arbeit dieser Tage gemeinsam mit Dr. Ruth Simon im international renommierten Fachblatt EMBO-Journal veröffentlicht. An dem von der Deutschen ...

Alle Focus-News des innovations-reports >>>

Anzeige

B2B Suche
Produkt / Dienstleistung
Firma / Organisation

Anzeige

IHR
JOB & KARRIERE
SERVICE
im innovations-report
in Kooperation mit academics
Aktuell

Mütterliche Antikörper behindern Impfschutz bei jungen Katzen

22.05.2012 | Biowissenschaften Chemie

Researchers Improve Fast-Moving Mobile Networks

22.05.2012 | Kommunikation Medien

New microscope uses rainbow of light to image the flow of individual blood cells

22.05.2012 | Medizintechnik

VideoLinks
B2B-VideoLinks
Weitere VideoLinks >>>
Veranstaltungen

Bericht zum Lachsmanagement: Die BLE auf der NASCO-Jahrestagung

22.05.2012 | Veranstaltungsnachrichten

Plagiate und wissenschaftliches Fehlverhalten

22.05.2012 | Veranstaltungsnachrichten

Der IdeenPark weckt Begeisterung für Technik

22.05.2012 | Veranstaltungsnachrichten

FindAndHelp