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

Resident T-cells key to salmonella immunity

Insights from mouse model could lead to better vaccines

2023-04-18
(Press-News.org) Salmonella infections cause about a million deaths a year worldwide, and there is an urgent need for better vaccines for both typhoid fever and non-typhoidal Salmonella disease. New work from researchers at the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine shows how memory T cells, crucial for a vaccine that induces a powerful immune response, can be recruited into the liver in a mouse model of Salmonella. 

The work was published April 11 in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 

“Understanding the immunology is key to developing a better vaccine,” said Professor Stephen McSorley, Department of Anatomy, Physiology and Cell Biology and senior author on the paper. 

McSorley’s laboratory studies Salmonella, and other bacterial infections such as Chlamydia, in laboratory mice. It’s recently become clear that a type of immune cell called tissue resident memory cells are key to immunity to Salmonella in mice, he said. 

When a pathogen enters the body, the immune system mounts a response, including CD4 T-cells which support other responses, such as antibody production by B-cells. When the infection is over, some of the cells specific to that pathogen remain as memory cells, waiting to be called rapidly into service again if the same threat returns. 

In the mouse model of Salmonella infection, those CD4 memory T-cells don’t circulate around the body. They hunker down in the liver as tissue resident memory cells. 

“We want to know, how do these cells get generated?” said Claire Depew, graduate student in McSorley’s laboratory and first author on the paper. The researchers knew that another type of tissue resident memory cell, CD8 cells, require a signal from the tissue to take up residence. Was the same true for the CD4? 

T-cell transfer To study the problem, Depew adapted an approach used by Australian researchers to study malaria, another disease involving tissue resident memory cells in the liver. She took CD4 T-cells specific for Salmonella and transferred them into mice that had never been infected with Salmonella, so the researchers could study which factors would cause those T-cells to become resident memory cells in the liver. 

They found that molecules that promote inflammation, especially interleukin-1 and 2, enhanced formation of Salmonella-specific CD4 tissue resident memory cells in the mice. This provides a rapid-response force that can act quickly against Salmonella infection. 

“They’re trained and ready to go,” McSorley said. 

The basic science results will help researchers in designing new vaccines for Salmonella, McSorley said. 

“A successful vaccine would need to promote conditions to form these cells, without causing liver inflammation,” he said. 

Postdoctoral researcher Jordan Rixon was a coauthor on the paper. The work was supported by funding from the National Institutes of Health.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Counting the cost of sunshine: Finding a better metric to measure human ecological footprints

Counting the cost of sunshine: Finding a better metric to measure human ecological footprints
2023-04-18
This planet of 8 billion people is bumping up against its ecological limits, and researchers are trying to quantify the effect of human activity on these finite resources. Some keep tallies of how much carbon they contribute to the atmosphere, others measure direct and indirect water consumption or keep tabs on the amount of land that our food habits demand. Each of these “footprints” offers an estimate of the impacts individuals and institutions have on the wider world, and are useful — but are flawed, according to geographer Chris ...

School discipline can be predicted, new research says. Is it preventable?

School discipline can be predicted, new research says. Is it preventable?
2023-04-18
Berkeley — Rates of school discipline fluctuate widely and predictably throughout a school year and increase significantly faster for Black students than for their white counterparts, University of California, Berkeley, researchers have found.   A new study published today in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences documents for the first time the “dynamic” nature of student discipline during an academic year. Daily rates of punishment across all schools in the study ratchet up in the weeks before Thanksgiving break, decline immediately ...

How electricity can heal wounds three times as fast

How electricity can heal wounds three times as fast
2023-04-18
Chronic wounds are a major health problem for diabetic patients and the elderly – in extreme cases they can even lead to amputation. Using electric stimulation, researchers in a project at Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, and the University of Freiburg, Germany, have developed a method that speeds up the healing process, making wounds heal three times faster. There is an old Swedish saying that one should never neglect a small wound or a friend in need. For most people, a small wound does not lead to any serious complications, but many common diagnoses ...

Orb weaver spider glue properties evolve faster than their glue genes, scientists find

2023-04-18
Spiders that don’t weave good silk don’t get to eat. The silk spiders produce which creates their webs is key to their survival – but spiders live in many different places which require webs fine-tuned for local success. Scientists studied the glue that makes orb weaver spiders’ webs sticky to understand how its material properties vary in different conditions. “Discovering the sticky protein components of biological glues opens the doors to determining how material properties evolve,” said Dr Nadia Ayoub of Washington and Lee University, co-corresponding author of the study ...

Machine learning can help to flag risky messages on Instagram while preserving users’ privacy

2023-04-17
As regulators and providers grapple with the dual challenges of protecting younger social media users from harassment and bullying, while also taking steps to safeguard their privacy, a team of researchers from four leading universities has proposed a way to use machine learning technology to flag risky conversations on Instagram without having to eavesdrop on them. The discovery could open opportunities for platforms and parents to protect vulnerable, younger users, while preserving their privacy. The team, led by researchers from Drexel University, Boston University, Georgia Institute of Technology ...

TOP advisory board welcomes new chair and members

TOP advisory board welcomes new chair and members
2023-04-17
Charlottesville, VA – The Transparency and Openness Promotion (TOP) Guidelines Advisory Board welcomes its new chair, Sean Grant, and board members to support its mission to promote transparency across the research lifecycle.  Grant is a Research Associate Professor at the HEDCO Institute for Evidence-Based Educational Practice at the University of Oregon with extensive experience researching TOP as Co-Principal Investigator for Transparency of Research Underpinning Social Intervention ...

UC Irvine physicists discover first transformable nano-scale electronic devices

2023-04-17
Irvine, Calif., April 17, 2023 — The nano-scale electronic parts in devices like smartphones are solid, static objects that once designed and built cannot transform into anything else. But University of California, Irvine physicists have reported the discovery of nano-scale devices that can transform into many different shapes and sizes even though they exist in solid states. It’s a finding that could fundamentally change the nature of electronic devices, as well as the way scientists research atomic-scale quantum materials. The study is published ...

Dixit receives 2023 Rosalind Franklin Young Investigator Award

2023-04-17
Marm Dixit, a Weinberg Distinguished Staff Fellow at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, was nominated for his work on imaging techniques for solid-state batteries. Marm Dixit, a Weinberg Distinguished Staff Fellow at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Oak Ridge National Laboratory, was named the 2023 recipient of the Rosalind Franklin Young Investigator Award. Since 2004, this biannual award has been given by the Advanced Photon Source (APS) user organization. It recognizes important scientific or technical accomplishments at (or beneficial to) the APS by a young investigator, typically a senior graduate student or early career researcher. The APS is a DOE Office ...

Medical dramas influence thoughts on dangers from vaping, new Twitter analysis reveals

Medical dramas influence thoughts on dangers from vaping, new Twitter analysis reveals
2023-04-17
After three popular primetime medical dramas included storylines about health harms from using e-cigarettes, hundreds of people took to Twitter to comment – including some who said they planned to quit vaping because of what they saw on the shows. A new analysis led by University of Pittsburgh School of Public Health scientists and published in the Journal of Health Communication examines the tweets for insights into the use of television shows to share public health messaging. Following the January 2020 episodes of New Amsterdam, Chicago Med and Grey’s Anatomy that each included plots involving adolescents with vaping-associated lung-injury, ...

The Green Mediterranean / high polyphenols diet promotes dramatic proximal aortic de-stiffening, twice as much as the healthy Mediterranean diet

2023-04-17
BEER-SHEVA, Israel, April 17, 2023 – The green Mediterranean – high polyphenols diet substantially regresses proximal aortic stiffness (PAS), a marker of vascular aging and increased cardiovascular risk. The green Mediterranean diet was pitted against the healthy Mediterranean diet and a healthy guideline-recommended control diet in the DIRECT PLUS, a large-scale clinical intervention trial. Researchers found that the green Mediterranean diet regressed proximal aortic stiffness by 15%, the Mediterranean diet by 7.3%, and ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Study challenges assumptions about how tuberculosis bacteria grow

NASA Goddard Lidar team receives Center Innovation Award for Advancements

Can AI improve plant-based meats?

How microbes create the most toxic form of mercury

‘Walk this Way’: FSU researchers’ model explains how ants create trails to multiple food sources

A new CNIC study describes a mechanism whereby cells respond to mechanical signals from their surroundings

Study uncovers earliest evidence of humans using fire to shape the landscape of Tasmania

Researchers uncover Achilles heel of antibiotic-resistant bacteria

Scientists uncover earliest evidence of fire use to manage Tasmanian landscape

Interpreting population mean treatment effects in the Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire

Targeting carbohydrate metabolism in colorectal cancer: Synergy of therapies

Stress makes mice’s memories less specific

Research finds no significant negative impact of repealing a Depression-era law allowing companies to pay workers with disabilities below minimum wage

Resilience index needed to keep us within planet’s ‘safe operating space’

How stress is fundamentally changing our memories

Time in nature benefits children with mental health difficulties: study

In vitro model enables study of age-specific responses to COVID mRNA vaccines

Sitting too long can harm heart health, even for active people

International cancer organizations present collaborative work during oncology event in China

One or many? Exploring the population groups of the largest animal on Earth

ETRI-F&U Credit Information Co., Ltd., opens a new path for AI-based professional consultation

New evidence links gut microbiome to chronic disease outcomes

Family Heart Foundation appoints Dr. Seth Baum as Chairman of the Board of Directors

New route to ‘quantum spin liquid’ materials discovered for first time

Chang’e-6 basalts offer insights on lunar farside volcanism

Chang’e-6 lunar samples reveal 2.83-billion-year-old basalt with depleted mantle source

Zinc deficiency promotes Acinetobacter lung infection: study

How optogenetics can put the brakes on epilepsy seizures

Children exposed to antiseizure meds during pregnancy face neurodevelopmental risks, Drexel study finds

Adding immunotherapy to neoadjuvant chemoradiation may improve outcomes in esophageal cancer

[Press-News.org] Resident T-cells key to salmonella immunity
Insights from mouse model could lead to better vaccines