(Press-News.org) Infectious disease specialists at the Johns Hopkins Children's Center have identified a protein that regulates the body's immune response to cytomegalovirus (CMV), a common pathogen that causes lifelong infections and can lead to devastating illness in newborns and those with weakened immune systems.
The protein — a cell receptor called NOD2 found in several types of immune cells — has long been known for its role in fighting off bacterial invaders by sensing their presence and alerting immune cells to release chemicals that weaken or destroy the harmful bacteria. That same protein, the Johns Hopkins team found, also appears to regulate the body's immune response to CMV by initiating a chemical signaling cascade that curbs viral spread.
The findings, published March 26 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE, offer what the Johns Hopkins teams says is a first-of-its-kind evidence that a protein that specializes in bacterial detection is also turned on when it sniffs out a virus from the DNA family. DNA viruses are known for their ability to cause chronic infections.
Researchers say NOD2 may provide new opportunities to modify the body's immune response to CMV and possibly spur the development of a vaccine against this most common congenital infection. CMV affects one in 150 newborns and causes serious neurologic damage in some of them. Although healthy adults who carry the virus rarely exhibit symptoms, CMV can cause serious problems in people with certain immune-deficiency disorders, those with advanced HIV, and in patients receiving immunosuppressive therapy to treat cancer or prevent organ rejection.
"Our results shed a new light on the interaction between CMV and the immune system, which we hope will open up a field of opportunities for treatment and prevention," says lead investigator Ravit Boger, M.D., an infectious disease specialist and CMV expert at the Johns Hopkins Children's Center.
Additionally, because the NOD2 protein is regulated by a gene implicated in the inflammatory intestinal condition Crohn's disease, the findings offer a new explanation for the severe CMV infections that sometimes occur in patients with Crohn's. The results challenge the prevailing belief that people with Crohn's are vulnerable to CMV because of the immunosuppressive drugs they receive to control colon inflammation, says Boger.
The new revelations were inspired by observations made in a single Crohn's patient, whose unusual presentation sparked Boger's curiosity several years ago. A gut biopsy revealed the presence of CMV in the patient's intestines.
The biopsy result made some sense: Immunosuppressive drugs make patients with Crohn's vulnerable to serious infections, while most healthy people carry CMV in their bodies without symptoms. That was the general wisdom. Still, Boger recalls, something didn't quite add up.
"I just kept thinking about this patient and the CMV we found in her colon," Boger says. "So I started looking into the genetics of Crohn's disease."
Then, a telling clue emerged — in her research, Boger noticed that people with Crohn's often
carry a defect in the gene that makes NOD2.
What if people with Crohn's disease were susceptible to CMV not just because of immunosuppressive therapy but because of this defective protein, Boger wondered. What if the malfunctioning NOD2 found in Crohn's was also responsible for the uncontrolled CMV infections seen in some of these patients?
To test the idea, Boger and fellow researcher Arun Kapoor, Ph.D., took connective cells from human skin and infected them with CMV. To compare the effect of different viruses, researchers also infected cells with herpes simplex type 1 and type 2, DNA viruses responsible for oral and genital herpes, respectively. The NOD2 receptors of CMV-infected cells showed robust activation, compared with uninfected cells. The NOD2 receptors of herpes-infected cells showed no such activation. Next, the investigators compared human cells with intact NOD2 receptors and those with defective or missing NOD2 receptors.
Cells with intact NOD2s secreted higher levels of interferon, a natural antiviral protein, and were able to curtail viral replication. By contrast, cells with missing or defective NOD2s produced only tiny amounts of interferon and failed to keep the virus in check. In fact, cells with defective NOD2 receptors had up to 70 percent more virus than cells with intact NOD2 receptors. When the scientists restored normal NOD2 function, the previously malfunctioning cells were once again able to block viral replication.
Conducting genetic analysis, the researchers found that a single misplaced amino acid in the NOD2 gene renders the NOD2 receptor incapable of sensing the presence of CMV. That very same mutation, Boger says, is also commonly found in people with Crohn's disease.
"Taken together, our results suggest that activation of the NOD2 receptor induces the
immune system to fight off CMV," Boger says.
"They also suggest that a defective NOD2 could be the culprit behind severe CMV infections in some patients with Crohn's."
Boger and colleagues plan to study the course of CMV in patients with Crohn's who carry NOD2 mutations to determine whether the presence of defective NOD2 leads to more severe CMV infection. Because CMV is so widely prevalent in humans, Boger says, the findings would have implications well beyond people with Crohn's disease. The team is also planning studies to better understand how the virus responds to NOD2 and what strategies it uses to counteract the immune system.
CMV is found in 60 percent of people 6 and older and in more than 90 percent of people older than 80. When infection occurs during pregnancy, the virus can be transmitted to the fetus and lead to a range of complications, the most common of which is hearing loss.
Michael Forman, of Johns Hopkins, was co-investigator on the research.
INFORMATION:
Researchers identify protein that helps control common viral infection
2014-03-26
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
UT Dallas study: No correlation between medical marijuana legalization, crime increase
2014-03-26
RICHARDSON, Texas (March 26, 2014) — The legalization of medical marijuana has sparked debate across the nation for decades.
Some opponents have argued that medical marijuana's legalization will lead to higher crime rates, but according to a new study at UT Dallas, legalization of medical cannabis is not an indicator of increased crime.
It actually may be related to reductions in certain types of crime, said Dr. Robert Morris, associate professor of criminology and lead author of the study, published in the journal PLOS ONE.
"We're cautious about saying, 'Medical ...
Disorganized cortical patches suggest prenatal origin of autism
2014-03-26
The architecture of the autistic brain is speckled with patches of abnormal neurons, according to research partially funded by the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), part of the National Institutes of Health. Published in the New England Journal of Medicine on March 27, 2014, this study suggests that brain irregularities in children with autism can be traced back to prenatal development.
"While autism is generally considered a developmental brain disorder, research has not identified a consistent or causative lesion," said Thomas R. Insel, M.D., director of NIMH. ...
Scientists identify core skin bacterial community in humpback whales
2014-03-26
Bacteria are invisible to the naked eye, but they reside on nearly every surface humans encounter—including the skin. Uncovering the role these microorganisms play in human health is a major focus of research in skin microbiology, but little is known about the identity or function of skin bacteria in other mammals.
In a paper published in the open access journal PLOS ONE, researchers at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) and colleagues identified a core skin bacterial community that humpback whales share across populations, which could point to a way to assess ...
Smartphone app helps support recovery after treatment for alcoholism
2014-03-26
A smartphone application appears to help patients with alcohol use disorder (AUD) reduce risky drinking days compared to patients who received usual care after leaving treatment in a residential program.
Alcohol dependence is a lifetime psychiatric diagnosis with relapse rates similar to other chronic illnesses. Continuing care for AUDs has been associated with better outcomes, but patients leaving treatment for AUDs typically are not offered aftercare.
The authors randomized 349 patients with alcohol dependence leaving three residential programs to treatment as ...
Migraine attacks increase following stress 'let-down'
2014-03-26
NEW YORK (March 26, 2014) – Migraine sufferers who experienced reduced stress from one day to the next are at significantly increased risk of migraine onset on the subsequent day, according to a new study conducted by researchers at the Montefiore Headache Center and Albert Einstein College of Medicine at Yeshiva University. Stress has long been believed to be a common headache trigger. In this study, researchers found that relaxation following heightened stress was an even more significant trigger for migraine attacks. Findings may aid in recommending preventive treatments ...
UGA researchers explore function of cancer-causing gene
2014-03-26
Athens, Ga. – Developmental biologists at the University of Georgia are discovering new roles for a specific gene known as Max's Giant Associated protein, or MGA. A little studied protein, MGA appears to control a number of developmental processes, and also may be connected to cancer development.
The researchers detail their findings in a paper published recently in the journal Developmental Cell.
"The same genes that are involved in building a person during embryonic development can mutate and cause cancer later in life," said Scott Dougan the study's principal investigator ...
History is made with first small LVAD implant for young muscular dystrophy patient
2014-03-26
DALLAS – March 26, 2014 – "Today, we're going to make history," said 18-year-old Eric Ramos on the day UT Southwestern Medical Center doctors operated on his ailing heart. Eric, who has Duchenne muscular dystrophy, is one of only three patients in the United States with the condition to receive a battery-operated left ventricular assist device (LVAD) to keep his weakening heart pumping blood through his body. He is the first patient in the country to be given a specific, smaller LVAD, which means doctors would not need to manipulate his diaphragm, which could compromise ...
Targeting enforcement where needed most in Africa's heart of biodiversity
2014-03-26
Scientists seeking a more efficient way of protecting the heart of Africa's wildlife—the Greater Virunga Landscape—have developed a method to make the most of limited enforcement resources, according to a new study by the Wildlife Conservation Society, the University of Queensland, Imperial College London, and the Uganda Wildlife Authority.
By channeling data on wildlife sightings and park guard patrolling routes into spatial planning software, conservationists have devised a cost-effective method for maximizing the deterrence effect of patrolling to protect Africa's ...
New Capsicum annuum pepper contains high concentrations of beneficial capsinoids
2014-03-26
ORONO, ME--Researchers have released a new Capsicum annuum pepper germplasm that contains high concentrations of capsinoids. The release was announced in the January 2014 issue of HortScience by researchers Robert L. Jarret from the USDA/Agricultural Research Service in Griffin, Georgia, in collaboration with Jason Bolton and L. Brian Perkins from the Department of Food Science and Human Nutrition at the University of Maine.
According to the report, the germplasm called "509-45-1" is a small-fruited Capsicum annuum L. pepper. Fruit of 509-45-1 contain high concentrations ...
AGU: New study shows major increase in West Antarctic glacial loss
2014-03-26
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Six massive glaciers in West Antarctica are moving faster than they did 40 years ago, causing more ice to discharge into the ocean and global sea level to rise, according to new research.
The amount of ice draining collectively from those half-dozen glaciers increased by 77 percent from 1973 to 2013, scientists report this month in Geophysical Research Letters, a journal of the American Geophysical Union. Pine Island Glacier, the most active of the studied glaciers, has accelerated by 75 percent in 40 years, according to the paper. Thwaites Glacier, ...