Research
Immune System Disease
Fighting Ability
DNA Arrays Give Clues To Better Vaccines
2-1-2002
"We are in the midst of a revolution in the way researchers
study infectious disease—instead of depending on culture
dishes as the only way to observe the behavior of pathogens,
scientists are able to eavesdrop on the cross talk between
invading microbes and the immune cells of our body,"
says Richard Young of the Whitehead Institute of Biomedical
Research. Young’s lab has done this using DNA microarrays
to explore the responses of human macrophages to a variety
of bacteria, and as a result, has found clues to making
safer, more potent vaccines.
Macrophages,
immune cells that are part of the first line of defense,
recognize and engulf microbes in a vigilant effort to keep
the body healthy. The researchers found that macrophages
respond to a broad range of bacteria by sending off an alarm
to the rest of the immune system and transforming into a
cell primed to mount an immune response.
Further
study revealed that the macrophage didn’t have to
"see" the whole bacteria to send off its alarm
signal, but the presence of specific bacterial components,
such as proteins and sugars, induced activation. "These
findings will help researchers design therapeutics that
will stimulate the immune system in a targeted manner, perhaps
with fewer side effects," says Young, lead author on
the study, which will appear in the February 5 issue of
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
|
|
"The interplay between a person’s immune
mechanisms and a microbe’s attempts to circumvent these defenses
represents a complex relationship. DNA arrays help researchers dissect
this struggle by measuring the activity of many genes in the immune
cells as they respond to pathogens. As a result, researchers gain
invaluable information about the strengths and vulnerabilities of
the microbes and our own immune system during an infection,"
explains Gerard Nau, a first co-author on the study and a researcher
in the Young lab. Ann Schlesinger, postdoctoral fellow in the Young
lab, and Joan Richmond, former Young lab member, were also first authors
on the paper.
DNA array studies improve our understanding of macrophage
defenses, provide insights into disease development, and suggest targets
for therapeutic intervention. The researchers found, for instance,
that Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the bacteria that cause tuberculosis,
fail to activate critical macrophage genes that are involved in fighting
bacteria. M. tuberculosis are unique in that they can somehow survive
inside the macrophage, only later to escape and cause disease.
It turns out that M. tuberculosis doesn’t trigger
the macrophage response to produce IL-12 and IL-15, like other bacteria
do. IL-12 plays a fundamental role in activating another arm of the
immune system called T helper responses and is critical for host resistance
to tuberculosis infection in mice and humans. The lack of strong IL-12
response in macrophages indicates that this may be one way M. tuberculosis
evades host defenses and supports the use of both IL-12 and IL-15
in clinical tuberculosis therapies, as suggested by animal models.
The researchers also found interesting specifics about
the shared macrophage activation program, which was induced by a wide
range of bacteria, including Gram-positive, Gram-negative, and mycobacteria.
While the activation program seemed to trigger a generic alarm, which
called on other antibacterial defenses of the immune system, the majority
of changes triggered in the macrophage involved cell surface proteins
and signaling molecules. Such changes generate new functions in the
macrophage, suggesting a maturation process similar to that observed
with other immune cells.
Interestingly, the presence of certain bacterial components
was enough to activate the alarm signal. This suggests promising new
adjuvants (compounds that make a vaccine more potent by increasing
an immune response) that could be used in vaccine development. The
list includes heat shock proteins, which supports their use in preclinical
and clinical vaccine trials.
The bacterial components that set off the alarm signal
activated a family of proteins called Toll-like receptors (TLRs),
suggesting that small molecule drugs designed to activate this receptor
may provide a new therapeutic approach.
"DNA microarray data is providing us with unprecedented
details about our own immune defense cells as they orchestrate a response
to attacking bacterial pathogens that are responsible for some of
the major diseases of mankind," says Young. "This information
should lead to new therapeutic strategies against these diseases."
This article has been adapted from a news release
issued by Whitehead Institute For Biomedical Research, www.wi.mit.edu.
Next - Back
to Immune System Disease Fighting Ability Research