(Press-News.org) A disease-causing bacterium found in the mouth needs manganese, a trace mineral, in order to cause a serious heart infection, according to a preclinical study led by researchers at Virginia Commonwealth University Philips Institute for Oral Health Research in the School of Dentistry.
The findings, which may solve a longstanding mystery of why some bacteria need manganese to cause disease, provide possible new targets for antibiotics.
Researchers from VCU and MIT have been studying the bacterium Streptococcus sanguinis, which lives in the mouth, to understand its role in infective endocarditis, a heart valve disease. The infection is hard to treat and can be deadly – killing more than 20 percent of the people who contract it.
Researchers have known for some time that several types of bacteria responsible for serious infections – including S. sanguinis – need more manganese than others to grow normally.
In joint studies published this week in the Journal of Biological Chemistry, researchers showed that an enzyme that provides the building blocks needed for making DNA requires manganese to do its job. When the VCU team eliminated that enzyme or a second protein that attaches the manganese to the enzyme, then the bacterium could no longer cause endocarditis, nor survive within the animal model. The MIT team carefully examined the activity of the purified enzymes and determined the function of each. The VCU-MIT study is the first of its kind to test the importance of these enzymes for causing any disease.
Understanding the importance of manganese in the cell has been key to learning the best way to target the bacterium and stop it from causing disease, according to corresponding author Todd Kitten, Ph.D., associate professor at the Phillips Institute for Oral Health Research at the VCU School of Dentistry.
"The best antibiotics attack parts of a bacterium that are critical for bacterial survival, but are not found in human cells," Kitten said.
"The manganese-requiring enzyme meets both requirements because these bacteria need it to survive and humans use a very different, iron-containing enzyme to make DNA building blocks. It is the manganese requirement that makes the bacterial proteins good targets," he said.
Kitten added that humans have very little manganese in their bodies, so these bacteria require specialized systems to take in enough manganese to survive. These uptake systems are not found in humans. The team is in the early stages of a collaboration with Glen Kellogg, Ph.D., associate professor in the Department of Medicinal Chemistry at the VCU School of Pharmacy, to create designer drugs to attack the manganese uptake system in these bacteria.
Down the road, it could be possible to target several other disease-causing bacteria that also have this enzyme and likely need it to cause disease, including MRSA; the flesh-eating bacterium, Streptococcus pyogenes; and the bacterium that causes anthrax.
The team is also examining whether manganese has other activities in these bacteria that might be equally important.
The research builds on the previously published reports of other VCU researchers. A 1995 study published in Infection and Immunity led by Francis Macrina, Ph.D., currently vice president for research at VCU, showed for the first time that a protein that turned out to be a manganese uptake protein was necessary for causing disease.
In the years since, dozens of researchers have discovered similar proteins in other disease-causing bacteria. This study also builds on work done by a collaborative VCU group that was the first to determine the DNA sequence of S. sanguinis.
INFORMATION:
Kitten collaborated with lead author, DeLacy Rhodes, Ph.D., postdoctoral fellow, at VCU, and second author, Katie Crump, Ph.D., postdoctoral fellow. Rhodes and Crump are VCU IRADCDA fellows. JoAnne Stubbe, Ph.D., Novartis Professor of Chemistry and professor of biology, served as principal investigator for the MIT team and was part of the team that discovered the family of bacterial manganese-containing enzymes. Her pioneering work with these enzymes earned her a National Medal of Science in 2009.
This work was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health R56AI085195 (T. Kitten); K12GM093857 (Paul B. Fisher, P.D.) for support of Drs. Rhodes and Crump; and NIHGM81393 (J. Stubbe).
The Journal of Biological Chemistry is a publication of the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
EDITOR'S NOTE: A copy of the study is available for reporters by e-mail request to the ASBMB News Office ahopp@asbmb.org.
Researchers identify key enzyme found in bacteria responsible for heart valve disease
Findings may point researchers toward development of new antibiotics
2014-03-05
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
New shrinking gel steers tooth tissue formation
2014-03-05
VIDEO:
When the temperature rises to just below body temperature, this biocompatible gel shrinks dramatically within minutes, compressing tooth-precursor cells (green) enclosed within it.
Click here for more information.
BOSTON, March 5, 2014 — A bit of pressure from a new shrinking, sponge-like gel is all it takes to turn transplanted unspecialized cells into cells that lay down minerals and begin to form teeth.
The bioinspired gel material could one day help repair or replace ...
Prehospital alerts let stroke patients skip the emergency room
2014-03-05
Philadelphia, Pa. (March 4, 2014) – Prehospital stroke alerts by emergency medical services (EMS) personnel can shorten the time to effective treatment with "clot-busting" drugs for patients with stroke, according to a report in the March issue of Neurosurgery, official journal of the Congress of Neurological Surgeons. The journal is published by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, a part of Wolters Kluwer Health.
Dr. Mandy J. Binning and colleagues at the Capital Institute for Neurosciences (CIN) at Capital Health, Trenton and Pennington, N.J., implemented a prehospital stroke ...
Your face says it all? Not so fast
2014-03-05
It's a concept that had become universally understood: humans experience six basic emotions—happiness, sadness, anger, fear, disgust, and surprise—and use the same set of facial movements to express them. What's more, we can recognize emotions on another's face, whether that person hails from Boston or Borneo.
The only problem with this concept, according to Northeastern University Distinguished Professor of Psychology Lisa Feldman Barrett, is that it isn't true at all.
For nearly two decades, Barrett has been tracking down the research that established this misconception ...
B-cells aggravate autoimmune diseases
2014-03-05
This news release is available in German.
Scientists in Freiburg may have discovered a fundamental aggravating factor in autoimmune diseases. If B-lymphocytes lack the protein PTP1B, the cells will become hyperactive for stimulatory signals and can thus promote an autoimmune attack. This study offers an additional explanation to how B-cells regulate an immune response.
In Germany, approximately 800,000 people suffer from rheumatoid arthritis. In this progressive disease, a person's own immune system attacks and destroys connective tissue. However, the most important ...
With flip of wrist, interventional radiologists treat uterine fibroids
2014-03-05
FAIRFAX, Va.—Interventional radiologists have devised a new way to access a woman's fibroids—by flipping her wrist and treating via an arm not groin artery—to nonsurgically shrink noncancerous growths in the muscular wall of the uterus. Researchers found this to be less painful and traumatic for women, allowing them to immediately sit up and move after uterine fibroid embolization (UFE)—with no overnight stay, according to a March article in the Society of Interventional Radiology's flagship publication, the Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology.
"Improving ...
When disaster strikes: Safeguarding networks
2014-03-05
WASHINGTON, March 5, 2014–Disasters both natural and human-caused can damage or destroy data and communications networks. Several presentations at the 2014 OFC Conference and Exposition, being held March 9-13 in San Francisco, Calif., USA will present new information on strategies that can mitigate the impacts of these disasters.
New Algorithm Finds Safe Refuge for Cloud Data
Much of our computing these days, from browsing websites and watching online videos to checking email and following social networks, relies on the cloud. The cloud lives in data centers – massive ...
A wristband for a different kind of cause -- environmental health
2014-03-05
From "Livestrong" to "Purple Paws," trendy wristbands have come to represent causes from cancer to ending cruelty to animals. Add a new wristband of a different sort: one that could close the loop on determining the potential disease risks of exposure to substances like pesticides. Scientists reported the development in the ACS journal Environmental Science & Technology.
Kim Anderson and colleagues note that people breathe, touch and ingest a mix of many substances at low levels every day. But figuring out if natural and synthetic compounds can lead to disease is difficult. ...
Hop leaves -- discarded in beer brewing -- have substances that could fight dental diseases
2014-03-05
Beer drinkers know that hops are what gives the drink its bitterness and aroma. Recently, scientists reported that the part of hops that isn't used for making beer contains healthful antioxidants and could be used to battle cavities and gum disease. In a new study in ACS' Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, they say that they've identified some of the substances that could be responsible for these healthful effects.
Yoshihisa Tanaka and colleagues note that their earlier research found that antioxidant polyphenols, contained in the hop leaves (called bracts) ...
Adolescent relationship violence has mental health implications for victims, perpetrators
2014-03-05
WASHINGTON, DC, March 5, 2014 — Described by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as "physical, sexual, or psychological harm by a current or former partner or spouse," intimate partner violence (IPV) is a serious public health issue affecting millions of people in the United States. New research from sociologists at Bowling Green State University (BGSU) shows that adolescents and young adults who perpetrate or fall victim to IPV are more likely to experience an increase in symptoms of depression.
Titled, "Intimate Partner Violence and Depressive Symptoms During ...
Pigment or bacteria? Researchers re-examine the idea of 'color' in fossil feathers
2014-03-05
Paleontologists studying fossilized feathers have proposed that the shapes of certain microscopic structures inside the feathers can tell us the color of ancient birds. But new research from North Carolina State University demonstrates that it is not yet possible to tell if these structures – thought to be melanosomes – are what they seem, or if they are merely the remnants of ancient bacteria.
Melanosomes are small, pigment-filled sacs located inside the cells of feathers and other pigmented tissues of vertebrates. They contain melanin, which can give feathers colors ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Connect or reject: Extensive rewiring builds binocular vision in the brain
Benefits and risks: informal use of antibiotics to prevent sexually transmitted infections on the rise in key populations in the Netherlands
New molecular tool sheds light on how cancer cells repair telomeres
First large-scale stem cell bank enables worldwide studies on genetic risk for Alzheimer’s disease
Hearing devices significantly improve social lives of those with hearing loss
CNIC scientists reveal how the cellular energy system evolved—and how this knowledge could improve the diagnosis of rare genetic diseases
AI sharpens pathologists' interpretation of tissue samples
Social outcomes among adults with hearing aids and cochlear implants
Passive smartphone sensors for detecting psychopathology
Ireland’s first BioBrillouin microscope will enable non-invasive assessment of living cells and tissues in real-time
Aligned stem cell sheets could improve regenerative therapies
Emergency department data show rise in hospitalizations due to pediatric clavicular fractures
A key group of cerebral amygdala neurons identified in anxiety and social disorders
What the sea spider genome reveals about their bizarre anatomy
More people need to know how to prevent SIDS
Many people choose unemployment benefits over poorly paid jobs
Certain young people more prone to anxiety and depression
Review article highlights urgent need for aflatoxin control strategies in Pakistan’s feed supply chain
Researchers reveal key differences in STING inhibition between humans and mice
Researchers generate lung cells from mouse fibroblasts in just 7 to 10 days
Prizewinner’s research reveals how immune responses to friendly skin microbiota could pave way for novel vaccination responses
Old aerial photos give scientists a new tool to predict sea level rise
20 million for courageous research at ISTA
Ships trigger high and unexpected emissions of the greenhouse gas methane
Optimizing laser irradiation: An in-silico meta-analysis of skin discoloration treatment
Climate crisis could force wild vanilla plants and pollinating insects apart, threatening global supply
Teens report spending 21% of each driving trip looking at their phone
Study explores the ‘social norms’ of distracted driving among teens
Diver-operated microscope brings hidden coral biology into focus
Enhancing the “feel-good” factor of urban vegetation using AI and street view images
[Press-News.org] Researchers identify key enzyme found in bacteria responsible for heart valve diseaseFindings may point researchers toward development of new antibiotics