Anzeige
Treating virulent influenza, sepsis, and other potentially deadly infections long has focused on looking for ways to kill viruses and bacteria. But new research from the University of Utah and Utah State University shows that modulating the body's own overeager inflammatory response to infection may help save more lives.
In a study published March 17 in Science Translational Medicine, researchers led by U of U cardiologist Dean Y. Li, M.D., Ph.D., professor of internal medicine and director of the Molecular Medicine Program, shows that protecting blood vessels from hyper-inflammatory response to infection reduced mortality rates in mouse models of avian flu and sepsis by as much as 50 percent. Specifically, the researchers identified a protein signaling pathway, Robo4, that when activated prevents inflammation from weakening blood vessels, which causes them to leak and can result in life-threatening organ damage.
The findings raise the possibility of new broad-range therapies that could be rapidly implemented by public health agencies to fight both viral and bacterial infections, such as pandemic influenza and sepsis, and even potentially deadly human-made biological agents that could cause widespread illness and death, according to Li. Such therapies would be given along with antibiotics, antivirals, and other drugs.
"By blocking the ill effects of inflammation on the host or patient by stabilizing blood vessels, we have identified an entirely different strategy to treat these infections," Li said. "In essence, we've shown that rather than attacking the pathogen, we can target the host to help it to fight infections."
While this study proves the concept of controlling the effects of inflammation to fight the effects of serious infection, developing therapies for people will take years.
Inflammation is a powerful weapon in the body's immune system; without this inflammation, patients would not be able to fight infection. But it's also a double-edged sword. When Biochemical mediators, called cytokines, are released in massive quantities as part of the inflammatory response, they can destabilize blood vessels, resulting in leakage, tissue edema (swelling), and in extreme cases, organ failure and death. For example, a severe infection such as that of the 1918 pandemic flu, can cause life-threatening lung damage when alveoli become inflamed and fill with fluid, a condition known as lung edema. Similarly, sepsis can damage organs such as the kidneys by weakening blood vessels and allowing fluid to leak into the kidney tissue, impairing its vital functions.
Although it will take much more work to determine if Robo4 can be manipulated to block inflammation in sepsis, influenza, and other infections, the protein's signaling pathway appears to be ideal for stabilizing the endothelial cells that line blood vessels, according to Guy A. Zimmerman, M.D., a U of U professor of internal medicine who investigates inflammation and sepsis. "For this reason, the Robo4 pathway may be more effective and less likely to have negative side-effects than some of the approaches and drugs that have been tried in the past," said Zimmerman, a co-author on the study.
Targeting the pathogens that cause influenza and sepsis has been the primary strategy to fight those infections. While this has been successful, it also has limitations because pathogens can evolve quickly to develop resistance to antibiotics and antiviral medications. A second approach has been to dampen a patient's immune system response to infection. However, past approaches led to poor outcomes in patients, in part because they sometimes increased the sick individual's susceptibility to a second, "opportunistic" infection.
Protecting the host from its own inflammatory response to infection offers a potential strategy to reduce the mortality rate from many different types of serious infections. In the mouse models of this study, the mortality rate for some sepsis and avian flu infections approached 90 percent when left untreated. By protecting blood vessels through activating Robo4, mortality was reduced in some cases to almost half.
Dale L. Barnard, Ph.D., a virus specialist and research associate professor at the Institute for Antiviral Research in the Department of Animal, Dairy and Veterinary Sciences at Utah State University, said the study opens a potentially exciting approach to treating virulent viral-caused infections such as pandemic H1N1 and the highly infectious avian flu. "It may be even a more effective approach if it were to be used in combination with antiviral drug therapy, perhaps allowing the antiviral drug to be used at concentrations below those which would induce drug resistance or allow the drug to be administered for shorter periods of time," said Barnard, also a co-author on the study.
Li's study of Robo4 as an agent for mitigating the effects of inflammation grew from his research into blood vessel formation. In 2003, he cloned Robo4 and showed that it inhibits uncontrolled blood vessel growth, thereby stabilizing vessels and preventing leakage. Robo4 is activated by another protein, called Slit.
Phil Sahm | Quelle: EurekAlert!
Weitere Informationen: www.hsc.utah.edu
Weitere Berichte zu: avian flu > bacterial infection > blood vessel > endothelial cell > flu infection > inflammatory response > mortality rate > mouse model > Robo4 > signaling pathway
Wandel der Hochschulbildung in Deutschland und Professionalisierung
09.02.2012 | Institut für Hochschulforschung (HoF) an der Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg
Internet-Therapie hilft bei quälendem Tinnitus
09.02.2012 | Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz
Erstmals gezeigt, dass Atomkerne transparent werden
Einem Team von DESY-Wissenschaftlern um Dr. Ralf Röhlsberger gelang es an der hochbrillanten Synchrotronlichtquelle PETRA III, Atomkerne mit Hilfe von Röntgenlicht transparent zu machen. Sie entdeckten dabei gleichzeitig ein neues Prinzip, um einen optisch gesteuerten Schalter für Licht herzustellen, also Licht mit Licht zu beeinflussen, ein wichtiger Baustein auf dem ...
Wissenschaftler beobachten, wie Oxytocin zentrale Schaltstellen im Gehirn erreicht und das Verhalten beeinflusst
Kuschelhormon, Treuehormon, Angstlöser – häufig gebrauchte Schlagwörter für das Neuropeptid Oxytocin, das sich in den letzten Jahren als ein Stoff erwiesen hat, der unser Verhalten in zentralen Regionen des Gehirns positiv beeinflussen kann. Was jedoch bisher völlig unklar war: Wie gelangt dieser Botenstoff aus dem Hypothalamus in die Hirnbereiche, die ...
Ein neuartiger Biopolymer-Film aus Lachs-DNA mit Silber-Nanopartikeln speichert Informationen kostengünstig und umweltverträglich.
Entstanden ist das organische System in fächer- und länderübergreifender Zusammenarbeit von Wissenschaftlern des DFG-Centers for Functional Nanostructures (CFN) am KIT und des Institute of Photonics Technologies an der National Tsing Hua University in Taiwan. Der DNA-Datenspeicher eignet sich unter anderem für biotechnische Anwendungen, etwa als Bauteil in Biosensoren.
Das System ...
Bildveröffentlichung der Europäischen Südsternwarte (Garching) - Mit dem Very Large Telescope (VLT) der ESO haben das bislang detailreichste Infrarotbild der Sternkinderstube des Carinanebels aufgenommen. Es zeigt vor dem spektakulären Hintergrund einer himmlischen Landschaft auf Gas, Staub und jungen Sterne zahlreiche nie gesehene Details und zählt zu den atemberaubendsten VLT-Bildern überhaupt.
Im Herzen der südlichen Milchstraße, im Sternbild Carina (Der Schiffskiel, [1]), befindet sich in einer Entfernung von etwa 7500 Lichtjahren die Sternkinderstube des Carinanebels. Diese ausgedehnte Wolke aus leuchtendem Gas und Staub ist von der Erde aus gesehen eine der nächstgelegenen Geburtsstätten massereicher Sterne.
Der Nebel beinhaltet einige der hellsten und ...
Auf der embedded world identifizieren Wissenschaftler der Fraunhofer ESK Lücken im Funkspektrum, um diese für zusätzliche Übertragungen zu nutzen.
Der in Halle 5, Stand 5-228, vorgestellte Prototyp zeigt das Funkspektrum in einem 3D-Spektrogramm, markiert die prognostizierten Lücken und prüft deren Eintreffen. Diese Methode, Cognitive Radio, verbessert die Übertragungsqualität in einem bereits vollen Funkspektrum ohne aufwändiges, statisches Koexistenzmanagement. Ziel ist eine höhere Verfügbarkeit und Zuverlässigkeit von Funk für die Automatisierung.
...
Anzeige
Anzeige

Kaltwasserkorallen als Anpassungskünstler?
09.02.2012 | Ökologie Umwelt- Naturschutz
Wandel der Hochschulbildung in Deutschland und Professionalisierung
09.02.2012 | Studien Analysen
Ocean warming causes elephant seals to dive deeper
09.02.2012 | Biowissenschaften Chemie
7. Mannheimer Arbeitsrechtstag am 14. März mit Experten aus Theorie und Praxis
09.02.2012 | Veranstaltungsnachrichten
International Forum on Terahertz Spectroscopy and Imaging
09.02.2012 | Veranstaltungsnachrichten
Teams aus neun Ländern treffen sich an der Leibniz Universität zum 6th Hanover PreMoot
09.02.2012 | Veranstaltungsnachrichten