PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Helper cells aptly named in battle with invading pathogens

2013-08-09
(Press-News.org) CAMBRIDGE, Mass. -- By tracking the previously unknown movements of a set of specialized cells, Whitehead Institute scientists are shedding new light on how the immune system mounts a successful defense against hostile, ever-changing invaders.

Central to the immune response is the activity inside structures known as germinal centers (GCs), which form in the body's lymph nodes upon detection of a foreign virus or bacteria. Within the GCs, populations of antibody-producing B cells move through continual cycles of mutation in an effort to generate antibodies perfectly suited to bind and neutralize the harmful invader. Because the production of such high-affinity antibodies requires diversity, multiple GCs arise in a single lymph node, with each GC housing an exclusive population of B cells.

During the mutation cycles, most of the B cells in any given GC fail to achieve sufficient antibody affinity and are eliminated. A few, however, measure up, and are selected to proliferate, leave the GC, and produce the antibodies that attack the offending pathogen. This selection process is driven by cells known as T follicular helper (Tfh) cells, which essentially cherry-pick the B cells capable of producing the most potent antibodies. Yet much of the behavior of Tfh cells has been something of a mystery. Until now.

By developing and deploying a novel cellular tagging and imaging methodology, a team of scientists led by Whitehead Fellow Gabriel Victora has discovered that, unlike their B cell counterparts, Tfh cells continually move from GC to GC within a lymph node. This surprising finding is reported in the August 9th edition of the journal Science.

Victora used fluorescence microscopy to trace the Tfh cells' migratory patterns in the lymph nodes of living mice, noting that these cells constantly migrate between germinal centers. This activity may enhance the diversity of antibody production by introducing static B cells to a range of dynamic Tfh cells, and could help explain how the immune system copes with mutating pathogens.

"We think this could be the way our immune system can maintain a targeted immune response, even when the target is moving," says Victora, whose latest research was conducted with collaborators at the Rockefeller University in New York.

Victora believes that continued mapping of the choreography between B cells and Tfh cells has significant implications for improving vaccine development, as it suggests opportunities to influence antibody development.

"We are slowly deciphering the rules governing antibody evolution in the germinal center," he says. "This will help inform vaccine design, especially for rapidly mutating viruses like HIV. It may be that manipulating the germinal center will be necessary to produce effective vaccines."

###

This work is supported by the National Institutes of Health (grant 5DP5OD012146-02).

Written by Matt Fearer

Gabriel Victora is a Fellow of Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, where his laboratory is located and all his research is conducted.

Full Citation:

"T Follicular Helper Cell Dynamics in Germinal Centers"

Science, August 9, 2013

Ziv Shulman (1), Alexander D. Gitlin (1), Sasha Targ (2), Mila Jankovic (1), Giulia Pasqual (2), Michel C. Nussenzweig (1,3), Gabriel D. Victora (2)

1. Laboratory of Molecular Immunology, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY 10021, USA.

2. Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, Cambridge, MA 02142, USA.

3. Howard Hughes Medical Institute, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY 10021, USA.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

How parents see themselves may affect their child's brain and stress level

2013-08-09
Boston, Mass., -- A mother's perceived social status predicts her child's brain development and stress indicators, finds a study at Boston Children's Hospital. While previous studies going back to the 1950s have linked objective socioeconomic factors -- such as parental income or education -- to child health, achievement and brain function, the new study is the first to link brain function to maternal self-perception. In the study, children whose mothers saw themselves as having a low social status were more likely to have increased cortisol levels, an indicator of stress, ...

Low childhood conscientiousness predicts adult obesity

2013-08-09
Results from a longitudinal study show that children who exhibit lower conscientiousness (e.g., irresponsible, careless, not persevering) could experience worse overall health, including greater obesity, as adults. The Oregon Research Institute (ORI) study examines the relationship between childhood personality and adult health and shows a strong association between childhood conscientiousness (organized, dependable, self-disciplined) and health status in adulthood. ORI scientist Sarah Hampson, Ph.D., and colleagues at the Kaiser Permanente Center for Health, Hawaii report ...

Deep Earth heat surprise

2013-08-09
Washington, D.C—The key to understanding Earth's evolution is to look at how heat is conducted in the deep lower mantle—a region some 400 to 1,800 miles (660 to 2,900 kilometers) below the surface. Researchers at the Carnegie Institution, with colleagues at the University of Illinois, have for the first time been able to experimentally simulate the pressure conditions in this region to measure thermal conductivity using a new measurement technique developed by the collaborators and implemented by the Carnegie team on the mantle material magnesium oxide (MgO). They found ...

Bubbles are the new lenses for nanoscale light beams

2013-08-09
Bending light beams to your whim sounds like a job for a wizard or an a complex array of bulky mirrors, lenses and prisms, but a few tiny liquid bubbles may be all that is necessary to open the doors for next-generation, high-speed circuits and displays, according to Penn State researchers. To combine the speed of optical communication with the portability of electronic circuitry, researchers use nanoplasmonics -- devices that use short electromagnetic waves to modulate light on the nanometer scale, where conventional optics do not work. However, aiming and focusing this ...

Tahiti: A very hot biodiversity hot spot in the Pacific

2013-08-09
A collaborative biological survey that focused on the insects of French Polynesia has resulted in the discovery of over 100 tiny predatory beetle species in Tahiti, 28 of these species newly described in the open-access journal ZooKeys. The predatory beetles range in size from 3-8 mm long, and have evolutionarily lost their flight wings, making them homebodies living in small patches of mountain forest. The author, James Liebherr of Cornell University, states "It is exhilarating working with such a fauna, because every new locality or ecological situation has the high ...

The code of objects

2013-08-09
Opening our eyes and seeing the world before us, full of objects, is a simple action we may take for granted. Yet our brain is constantly carrying out a huge analysis only to let us see a flower, a pen, the face of our children. Where exactly in our brain does shape become meaning? A group of scientists coordinated by Davide Zoccolan of SISSA of Trieste, in collaboration with the team headed over by Riccardo Zecchina of Polytechnic University of Turin (within the Programma Neuroscienze 2008/2009 financed by Compagnia di San Paolo), studied a specific area of the brain ...

The day before death: A new archaeological technique gives insight into the day before death

2013-08-09
The day before the child's death was not a pleasant one, because it was not a sudden injury that killed the 10-13 year old child who was buried in the medieval town of Ribe in Denmark 800 years ago. The day before death was full of suffering because the child had been given a large dose of mercury in an attempt to cure a severe illness. This is now known to chemist Kaare Lund Rasmussen from University of Southern Denmark – because he and his colleagues have developed a new methodology that can reveal an unheard amount of details from very shortly before a person's death. ...

New hope for improved TB treatments

2013-08-09
Researchers at the University of Southampton have identified new markers of tuberculosis (TB) that may help in the development of new diagnostic tests and treatments. Published online in the Journal of Infectious Diseases, the study investigated the proteins that are released by a break down of the lung structure in TB patients. Lung damage causes both transmission of infection and mortality. They found that fragments released by break down of the lung's key proteins (collagen and elastin), are increased in the sputum of patients with TB. They also discovered that ...

Whole-genome sequencing uncovers the mysteries of the endangered Chinese alligator

2013-08-09
August 9, 2013, Shenzhen, China - In a study published in Cell Research, Chinese scientists from Zhejiang University and BGI have completed the genome sequencing and analysis of the endangered Chinese alligator (Alligator sinensis). This is the first published crocodilian genome, providing a good explanation of how terrestrial-style reptiles adapt to aquatic environments and temperature-dependent sex determination (TSD). The Chinese alligator is a member of the alligator family that lives in China. It is critically endangered with a population of ~100 wild and ~10,000 ...

New treatment for brittle bone disease found

2013-08-09
A new treatment for children with brittle bone disease has been developed by the University of Sheffield and Sheffield Children's Hospital. The study of the new treatment for children with the fragile bone disease Osteogenesis Imperfecta was published this week in the world's leading general medical journal, The Lancet. This is the first study to clearly demonstrate that the use of the medicine risedronate can not only reduce the risk of fracture in children with brittle bones but also have rapid action - the curves for fracture risk begin to diverge after only 6 weeks ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

McMaster researchers uncover blood metabolites that may influence early childhood development

Why don’t pandas eat more meat? Molecules found in bamboo may be behind their plant-based diet

Development of 'transparent stretchable substrate' without image distortion could revolutionize next-generation displays

Improving the scope of wearable monitors

Zeroing in: SMU project to boost indoor localization capabilities for the public agencies

E. coli strain in Egyptian dairy products also found in Japan school outbreak

Quantum computing “a marathon, not a sprint”

Large population study identifies long-term health risks after COVID-19 hospitalization

Element relational graph-augmented multi-granularity contextualized encoding for document-level event role filler extraction

Employee burnout can cost employers millions each year

The cost of domestic violence to women's employment and education

Critical illness more common than expected in African hospitals - low-cost treatments offer hope

How our lungs back up the bone marrow to make our blood

Fat transport deficiency explains rare childhood metabolic crises

Remote work “a protective shield” against gender discrimination

How air pollution and wildfire smoke may contribute to memory loss in Alzheimer’s disease

UAF scientist designing satellite to hunt small space debris

Innate immune training aggravates inflammatory bone loss

An ancient RNA-guided system could simplify delivery of gene editing therapies

Mayo Clinic recognized as ‘World’s Best Hospital’ by Newsweek for the seventh straight year

Self-driving cars learn to share road knowledge through digital word-of-mouth

Medicaid extension policies that cover all immigrants in a post-COVID world reduce inequities in postpartum insurance coverage

Physical activity linked to lower risk of dementia, sleep disorders, other diseases

Columbia’s Public Health School launches Climate & Health Center

$4.9 million grant enables test of psychedelic MDMA as enhancement for PTSD therapy

Emerging treatments for social disconnection in psychiatric illness

Leading the charge to better batteries

Consequences of overplanting rootworm-resistant maize in the US Corn Belt

The distinct role of Earth’s orbit in 100-thousand-year glacial cycles

Genome-based phylogeny resolves complicated Molluscan family tree

[Press-News.org] Helper cells aptly named in battle with invading pathogens