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

Human neutrophil peptide-1: A new anti-leishmanial drug candidate

2013-10-18
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Sima Rafati
sima-rafatisy@pasteur.ac.ir
98-216-695-3311 x21
Public Library of Science
Human neutrophil peptide-1: A new anti-leishmanial drug candidate Leishmaniasis is a vector borne disease caused by different Leishmania species with different clinical manifestations. Cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) is endemic and widespread especially among young individuals in Iran. Currently prophylactic or therapeutic vaccines are not available, and in spite of vector control wherever possible, the disease has not been controlled. Although the majority of zoonotic CL cases heal within 6-9 months, anthroponotic cases persist much longer. Both types leave lifelong scars that are the cause of social stigma and much morbidity; particularly important for young girls with lesions on the face or exposed area of the body. The first line drugs (antimonials) are toxic and require repeated painful injections accompanied by considerable side effects. This coupled with the development of drug resistance, recently reported in Iran, indicate the urgent need for development of new therapeutics.

Sara Dabirian, Ph.D student at Pasteur Institute of Iran, took advantage of molecules with limited toxicity to stimulate innate immune responses as a new approach to fight against leishmaniasis. Human neutrophil peptide-1 (HNP-1) is one of the most potent defensins with a broad antimicrobial activity. This peptide is naturally found within a granule of human neutrophils, a cell type that has the capacity to both kill Leishmania parasites and serve as an immediate host cell.

Using a prokaryotic expression system and an in vitro folding procedure, Dabirian et al. succeeded to cost-efficiently produce substantial amounts of active HNP-1.

The results, publishing October 17th, 2013 in PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases, demonstrated that HNP-1 has direct leishmanicidal effects for both promastigote and amastigote and efficiently kills the parasites at concentrations non-toxic to host cells. Treatment of neutrophils with the HNP-1 was further shown to increase the life-span of the neutrophils and reduce the ability to be infected by Leishmania parasites. This was accompanied by an increase in production of the cytokine TNF-α and a reduction of the regulatory cytokine TGF-β following HNP-1 treatment of Leishmania infected neutrophils.

Professor Sima Rafati, from Molecular Immunology and Vaccine Research Laboratory at Pasteur Institute of Iran, who led the study, said: "The effects of HNP-1 on parasites and infected cells are anticipated to favorably alter the outcome of Leishmania infection. These results showed that HNP-1 holds a real potential as a candidate for a new modality of treatment for leishmaniasis". This approach may also be applicable for treatment of different forms of leishmaniasis, although it needs further investigation both in vivo and in vitro.

INFORMATION:

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Pioneering use of oral cholera vaccine during outbreak

2013-10-18
Pioneering use of oral cholera vaccine during outbreak In a report publishing October 17th, 2013 in PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases, the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) and ...

5-year-old children are as likely to suffer from bilharzia as their mothers

2013-10-18
5-year-old children are as likely to suffer from bilharzia as their mothers Children of women harboring the bilharzia (schistosomiasis) worm during pregnancy are more likely to suffer the infection by the age of five years, a new study publishing October 17th, ...

To sleep, perchance to clean

2013-10-18
In findings that give fresh meaning to the old adage that a good night's sleep clears the mind, a new study shows that a recently discovered system that flushes waste from the brain is primarily active during sleep. This revelation could transform scientists' understanding of the biological purpose of sleep and point to new ways to treat neurological disorders. "This study shows that the brain has different functional states when asleep and when awake," said Maiken Nedergaard, M.D., D.M.Sc., co-director of the University of Rochester Medical Center (URMC) Center for ...

The sly maneuvers of the fungus fatal to frogs

2013-10-18
This news release is available in Spanish. Like subsurface ninjas, the cells of a particular fungus are slipping into the skins of amphibians worldwide, killing them, and now a new study hints at why this particular fungus has been so successful. In 1998, a new species of chytrid fungus called Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis was identified. In recent decades, it has contributed to rendering dozens of frog species extinct, researchers think. They know the fungus inserts itself into the skin of frogs, drying out a layer they require to be hydrated, but just how the ...

Complete skull from early Homo evokes a single, evolving lineage

2013-10-18
This news release is available in French and Arabic. What if the earliest members of our Homo genus—those classified as Homo habilis, Homo rudolfensis, Homo erectus and so forth—actually belonged to the same species and simply looked different from one another? That's precisely the implication of a new report, which describes the analysis of a complete, approximately 1.8-million-year-old skull that was unearthed in Dmanisi, Georgia. Unlike other Homo fossils, this skull, known as Skull 5, combines a small braincase with a long face and large teeth. It was ...

Researchers rewrite an entire genome -- and add a healthy twist

2013-10-18
Scientists from Yale and Harvard have recoded the entire genome of an organism and improved a bacterium's ability to resist viruses, a dramatic demonstration of the potential of rewriting an organism's genetic code. "This is the first time the genetic code has been fundamentally changed," said Farren Isaacs, assistant professor of molecular, cellular, and developmental biology at Yale and co-senior author of the research published Oct. 18 in the journal Science. "Creating an organism with a new genetic code has allowed us to expand the scope of biological function in ...

Vitamin D does not contribute to kidney stones, study asserts

2013-10-18
Increased vitamin D levels may prevent a wide range of diseases, according to recent studies. However, some previous studies led to a concern that vitamin D supplementation could increase an individual's risk of developing kidney stones. However, a study of 2,012 participants – published in the American Journal of Public Health –found no statistically relevant association between 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25 (OH)D) serum level in the range of 20 to 100 ng/mL and the incidence of kidney stones. This study – led by Cedric F. Garland, DrPH, adjunct professor in the Division ...

Natural selection enables purple loosestrife to invade northern Ontario

2013-10-18
TORONTO, ON - University of Toronto research has found that purple loosestrife – an invasive species that competes with native plants for light and nutrients and can degrade habitats for wildlife – has evolved extremely rapidly, flowering about three weeks earlier as it has spread to northern Ontario. This has allowed populations of the species to thrive in the colder climate with a more than 30-fold increase in seed production. "The ability of invasive species to rapidly adapt to local climate has not generally been considered to be an important factor affecting spread," ...

Field Museum scientists estimate 16,000 tree species in the Amazon

2013-10-18
Researchers, taxonomists, and students from The Field Museum and 88 other institutions around the world have provided new answers to two simple but long-standing questions about Amazonian diversity: How many trees are there in the Amazon, and how many tree species occur there? The study will be published October 17, 2013 in Science. The vast extent and difficult terrain of the Amazon Basin (including parts of Brazil, Peru, Columbia) and the Guiana Shield (Guyana, Suriname, and French Guiana), which span an area roughly the size of the 48 contiguous North American states, ...

Frog-killing fungus paralyzes amphibian immune response

2013-10-18
A fungus that is killing frogs and other amphibians around the world releases a toxic factor that disables the amphibian immune response, Vanderbilt University investigators report Oct. 18 in the journal Science. The findings represent "a step forward in understanding a long-standing puzzle – why the amphibian immune system seems to be so inept at clearing the fungus," said Louise Rollins-Smith, Ph.D., associate professor of Pathology, Microbiology and Immunology. Although the identity of the toxic fungal factor (or factors) remains a mystery, its ability to inhibit a ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Highly stable self-rectifying memristor arrays: Enabling reliable neuromorphic computing via multi-state regulation

Composite superionic electrolytes for pressure-less solid-state batteries achieved by continuously perpendicularly aligned 2D pathways

Exploring why some people may prefer alcohol over other rewards

How expectations about artificial sweeteners may affect their taste

Ultrasound AI receives FDA De Novo clearance for delivery date AI technology

Amino acid residue-driven nanoparticle targeting of protein cavities beyond size complementarity

New AI algorithm enables scientific monitoring of "blue tears"

Insufficient sleep among US adolescents across behavioral risk groups

Long COVID and recovery among US adults

Trends in poverty and birth outcomes in the US

Heterogeneity of treatment effects of GLP-1 RAs for weight loss in adults

Within-person association between daily screen use and sleep in youth

Low-dose lithium for mild cognitive impairment

Catheter ablation and oral anticoagulation for secondary stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation

A new theory of brain development

Pilot clinical trial suggests low dose lithium may slow verbal memory decline

Bioprinting muscle that knows how to align its cells just as in the human body

A hair-thin fiber can read the chemistry of a single drop of body fluid

SwRI develops magnetostrictive probe for safer, more cost-effective storage tank inspections

National report supports measurement innovation to aid commercial fusion energy and enable new plasma technologies

Mount Sinai, Uniformed Services University join forces to predict and prevent diseases before they start

Science of fitting in: Do best friends or popular peers shape teen behavior?

USF study: Gag grouper are overfished in the Gulf; this new tool could help

New study from Jeonbuk National University finds current climate pledges may miss Paris targets

Theoretical principles of band structure manipulation in strongly correlated insulators with spin and charge perturbations

A CNIC study shows that the heart can be protected during chemotherapy without reducing antitumor efficacy

Mayo Clinic study finds single dose of non-prescribed Adderall raises blood pressure and heart rate in healthy young adults

Engineered immune cells show promise against brain metastases in preclinical study

Improved EV battery technology will outmatch degradation from climate change

AI cancer tools risk “shortcut learning” rather than detecting true biology

[Press-News.org] Human neutrophil peptide-1: A new anti-leishmanial drug candidate