Do you look infected? Should I kill you? No, I'm fine, move along
How viruses use 'fake' proteins to hide in our cells
2014-07-07
(Press-News.org) Some viruses can hide in our bodies for decades. They make 'fake' human proteins that trick our immune cells into thinking 'everything is awesome', there's nothing to see here.
Now researchers at the Imaging Centre of Excellence at Monash and Melbourne Universities have determined the basic structure of one of the two known families of these deceptive proteins.
Using synchrotron light and working with a common virus that lives in people happily and for the most part harmlessly, they worked out the structure of the fake proteins. This is an important first step towards producing better vaccines and drugs to fight viral disease.
The research was posted online this week by the Journal of Biological Chemistry. It will appear in the September issue of the journal.
The paper describes the structure of m04 immunoevasin from mouse cytomegalovirus, a member of the m02 protein family.
Cytomegaloviruses belong to the herpesvirus family whose members can cause glandular fever, chicken pox and cold sores. About half the population become infected with the virus, develop flu-like illness and then carry the virus for life. But the virus can be dangerous to pregnant women and people whose immune system becomes supressed.
The mouse variant is an important model for understanding how this family of viruses can hide from our immune systems.
"Our work highlights how these viruses mimic the immune system in order to evade it," says Monash University's Dr Richard Berry, a senior author of the paper. He works in a research group led by Prof Jamie Rossjohn, the other senior author and a Chief Investigator of the Imaging Centre.
Mouse and human immune T-cells patrol our bodies checking on the health of cells. One of things they look for is a complex of proteins on the surface of cells. This major histocompatibility complex (MHC) presents a snapshot of what's inside the cell. If bits of viral protein are detected by the T cells, they flag the infected cell for destruction.
Viruses fight back by disrupting the production of the MHC protein complex, thus reducing the numbers on the outer membrane.
But then, the next stage of what could be described as an evolutionary arms race kicks in. If there are too few MHC proteins on the outer membrane of a cell, then a different type of immune cell, termed the natural killer cell, will kill the cell just to be safe.
Cytomegaloviruses have responded to this by making large families of fake cellular proteins that interfere with natural killer cell recognition. It is the basic structure of one of these families that Rossjohn, Berry and their colleagues have become the first researchers to reveal.
"It's been a race against our international competitors which we won with the help of the Australian Synchrotron," Rossjohn says. "We were only able to produce very small protein crystals from which to solve the structures—too small to allow us to gain meaningful data with anything other than synchrotron X-rays."
INFORMATION:
Abstract and paper available at: http://www.jbc.org/content/early/2014/06/30/jbc.M114.584128.full.pdf
More about the Imaging Centre at: http://www.imagingcoe.org
For interviews
Richard Berry, senior author, +0402 113 745, Richard.berry@monash.edu.au
Media contacts:
Niall Byrne, +61 417 131 977, niall@scienceinpublic.com.au (for the ARC Imaging Centre)
Lucy Handford, lucy.handford@monash.edu (for Monash University)
Annie Rahilly, +61 432 758 734, anne.rahilly@unimelb.edu.au (for the University of Melbourne)
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
NUS researchers discover novel protein complex with potential to combat gastric cancer
2014-07-07
A team of scientists from the Cancer Science Institute of Singapore (CSI Singapore) at the National University of Singapore (NUS) discovered that a protein named IL23A is part of our stomach's defence against bacterial infection which leads to gastric cancer. This finding could potentially be used to combat the deadly disease.
The research group, led by Professor Yoshiaki Ito, Senior Principal Investigator at CSI Singapore, also showed that the production of IL23A by stomach cells requires the tumour suppressor gene, RUNX3, which is frequently silenced in gastric cancer. ...
Water bonus flows from climate change measures
2014-07-07
The equivalent of one-third of Melbourne's water use could be saved each year through the implementation of efficiency measures that deal with climate change, according to a new study.
Researchers at the Monash Sustainability Institute analysed the water-saving potential of 74 options for reducing greenhouse gas emissions identified in ClimateWorks Australia's award-winning Low Carbon Growth Plan for Australia. The research was published this week in Springer's international journal Climatic Change.
Monash University Research Fellow Dr Philip Wallis said an analysis ...
First cancer immunotherapy for dogs developed
2014-07-07
As in humans, cancers in dogs have complex causes. The interaction of the environment, food, and genetic disposition are the most well known factors. Today nearly all methods of human medicine are basically available for dogs with cancer, but this was not true of cancer immunotherapy so far.
So-called cancer immunotherapy - which is the treatment of tumors by the use of antibodies - has been established and used very successfully in human medicine for about 20 years. Since cancer cells bear very specific antigens on the surface, the corresponding antibodies bind to these ...
Novel type of bird pollination mechanism discovered in South America
2014-07-07
The genus Axinaea belongs to the large, mainly tropical flowering plant family Melastomataceae (Meadow Beauty Family). Most of the ca. 5000 species in the family rely on bees for their pollination. Only about 100 are known to be pollinated by other insects or vertebrates. The flowers of Axinaea appear in clusters of few to more than twenty flowers and the petals of the different species are pink, yellow, orange or red. The stamens (male reproductive organs) stand out based on the contrasting colours of their bulbous appendages. The pollination mechanism of Axinaea had never ...
Pseudogenes may provide clearer understanding of biomarkers
2014-07-07
Alas, the thankless pseudogene.
Dysfunctional, unloved and seemingly of little use, these poor-cousin relatives of genes have lost their protein-coding abilities. They contain material not essential for an organism's survival and are the "last stop" for removal of genomic waste.
Not any more. The pseudogene's day may have arrived thanks to scientists at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston.
Han Liang, Ph.D., an assistant professor in the Department of Bioinformatics and Computational Biology at the Cancer Center is advancing knowledge of these ...
NYU researchers find 18 percent of high school seniors smoke hookah
2014-07-07
New York, NY – July 7, 2014 - While cigarette use is declining precipitously among youth, evidence indicates that American adolescents are turning to ethnically-linked alternative tobacco products, such as hookahs, cigars, and various smokeless tobacco products, according to a recent report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Now a new study by researchers affiliated with New York University's Center for Drug Use and HIV Research (CDUHR), in the August 2014 edition of Pediatrics identifies how prevalent Hookah use is and which teens are most likely ...
Denali duck-billed dino tracks
2014-07-07
Boulder, Colo., USA – A trio of paleontologists has discovered a remarkable new tracksite in Alaska's Denali National Park filled with duck-billed dinosaur footprints -- technically referred to as hadrosaurs -- that demonstrates they not only lived in multi-generational herds but thrived in the ancient high-latitude, polar ecosystem. The paper provides new insight into the herd structure and paleobiology of northern polar dinosaurs in an arctic greenhouse world.
The article, "Herd structure in Late Cretaceous polar dinosaurs: A remarkable new dinosaur tracksite, Denali ...
Babies born to healthy mums worldwide are strikingly similar in size
2014-07-07
Babies' growth in the womb and their size at birth, especially their length, are strikingly similar the world over – when babies are born to healthy, well-educated and well-nourished mothers.
That's the finding of a landmark international study, INTERGROWTH-21st, led by Oxford University researchers, which involved almost 60,000 pregnancies in eight defined urban areas in Brazil, China, India, Italy, Kenya, Oman, the UK and USA.
Worldwide there are wide disparities in the average size of babies at birth. This has significant consequences for future health, as small ...
Researchers uncover new knowledge about our intestines
2014-07-06
Researchers from DTU Systems Biology have mapped 500 previously unknown microorganisms in human intestinal flora as well as 800 also unknown bacterial viruses (also called bacteriophages) which attack intestinal bacteria.
To map the microorganisms, the researchers have developed a new principle for analysing DNA sequence data, which they have named the co-abundance principle. A principle which basically assumes that different pieces of DNA from the same organism will occur in the same amount in a sample, and that this amount will vary over a series of samples.
"Using ...
'Nanojuice' could improve how doctors examine the gut
2014-07-06
BUFFALO, N.Y. – Located deep in the human gut, the small intestine is not easy to examine. X-rays, MRIs and ultrasound images provide snapshots but each suffers limitations.
Help is on the way.
University at Buffalo researchers are developing a new imaging technique involving nanoparticles suspended in liquid to form "nanojuice" that patients would drink. Upon reaching the small intestine, doctors would strike the nanoparticles with a harmless laser light, providing an unparalleled, non-invasive, real-time view of the organ.
Described July 6 in the journal Nature Nanotechnology, ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Poor oral health linked with body pain and migraines in women
How is climate change affecting seasonal allergies?
Does universal preschool lead to better academic outcomes?
Could fish swim bladders be useful in a treatment for heart failure?
Does cancer treatment affect connections in the brain?
Unsafe driving during school drop offs at ‘unacceptable’ levels
RAND survey reveals varied curriculum use and time constraints among public school pre-k teachers
Study finds handheld electro-shockers can pose risk for individuals with cardiac implants
Holograms that can be grabbed and manipulated
Novel structural insights reveal the mechanism of mitochondrial protein HAX1 interaction with CLPB
Warm temperature promotes sex change in ricefield eel, a protogynous hermaphrodite freshwater fish
3D-printed open-source robot offers accessible solution for materials synthesis
Lip sync: study reveals gender differences in preference for lip size
High prevalence of tooth and gum issues in teenage professional footballers in England
Hearing loss linked to heightened heart failure risk
Relaxation techniques may help lower high blood pressure—at least in the short term
Bans on outdoor junk food ads derailed by industry lobbying
Prescribing parkrun is a retrograde step, argues doctor
AMS science preview: Fire weather, bumpy hurricane flights, climate extremes and protests
People’s brain activity shows their political affiliation while buying food, study shows
Phage therapy at a crossroads: global experts unite in Berlin for groundbreaking 2025 Congress
SwRI launches BEAMoCap™ markerless motion capture for 3D animation in gaming, film
Open access institutional membership - Xiamen University and Bentham Science
Two mixtures of common food additives, including aspartame, sucralose, xanthan & guar gums, modified starches, carrageenan and citric acid, are linked with slightly increased risk of type II diabetes,
Certain food additive mixtures may be associated with an increased risk of type 2 diabetes
Mouse brains register the difference between touching something and being touched
Researchers identify safer pathway for pain relief
Cleveland Clinic-led trial is the first to show a delay in confirmed disability progression in non-relapsing secondary progressive multiple sclerosis
Community Review Board votes against public health care merger in Oregon after doctors group raises concerns about university’s primate research center
Groundbreaking study reveals changes in brain cell composition and gene activity in Tourette syndrome
[Press-News.org] Do you look infected? Should I kill you? No, I'm fine, move alongHow viruses use 'fake' proteins to hide in our cells