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

Scavenger cells accomplices to viruses

2011-07-22
(Press-News.org) This release is available in German. VIDEO: Red-colored adenovirus particles are found in the periphery of a human epithelial cell and steadily move towards the cell nucleus at the bottom of the image. The endocytic vesicles in...
Click here for more information.

Mucosal epithelia do not have any receptors on the outer membrane for the absorption of viruses like hepatitis C, herpes, the adenovirus or polio, and are thus well-protected against pathogenic germs. However, certain viruses, such as the human immunodeficiency virus HIV, still manage to enter the body via the mucous membrane. Just how this infiltration occurs on a molecular level has been a mystery. Three hypotheses were discussed: firstly, that it's caused by mechanical damage to the mucous membrane; secondly, the presence of previously unknown receptors on the mucous membrane cells; and, thirdly, that the viruses are smuggled in via a kind of Trojan horse. Now, for the first time, cell biologists from the University of Zurich have succeeded in identifying the infection mechanism for adenoviruses.

In the recently published online magazine Nature Communications, Verena Lütschg and cell biologists from the Institute of Molecular Biology headed by Urs Greber reveal how type-5 adenoviruses in the lung epithelia utilize an immune response triggered by the infection for the progression of the infection: Adenoviruses use scavenger cells and their subsequent production of antiviral cytokines as a door-opener for the infection of the lung epithelial cells.

Exposure of shielded receptors

Antiviral cytokines play a key role in immunological reactions and trigger inflammatory responses, for instance. They induce the epithelial cells to expose certain receptors that are shielded under normal conditions and thus activate immune cells in defense. For healthy people, an infection of the lung with type-5 adenoviruses is harmless as they merely cause a cold. Under very stressful situations or in the case of chronic respiratory diseases, however, adenoviruses can cause severe, acute infections that can sometimes be fatal.

The recently identified infection mechanism can serve as a model for how the pathogens penetrate the mucosal epithelial cells and enter the body. However, it is also crucial from a therapeutic point of view. Type-5 adenoviruses are already used very often as transport vehicles in cancer-gene therapy today. Knowing the transport route will help develop both this gene therapy and specifically acting cancer treatment further.

### END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Bacterial attack strategy uses special delivery of toxic proteins

Bacterial attack strategy uses special delivery of toxic proteins
2011-07-22
When competing for food and resources, bacteria employ elaborate strategies to keep rival cells at bay. Scientists have now identified a pathway that allows disease-causing bacteria to attack other bacterial cells by breaking down their cell wall. Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a type of bacteria readily found in everyday environments. It easily forms colonies in a wide variety of settings, including medical devices, body organs and skin wounds. This allows it to cause disease and act as a major pathogen, particularly in hospitals. Research led by Joseph Mougous, assistant ...

Blue collar workers work longer and in worse health than their white collar bosses

2011-07-22
While more Americans are working past age 65 by choice, a growing segment of the population must continue to work well into their sixties out of financial necessity. Research conducted by the Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health and the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine looked at aging, social class and labor force participation rates to illustrate the challenges that lower income workers face in the global marketplace. The study used the burden of arthritis to examine these connections because 49 million U.S. adults have arthritis, and 21 ...

Chronic pain in homeless people not managed well: Study

2011-07-22
TORONTO, Ont., July 21, 2011—Chronic pain is not managed well in the general population and it's an even greater challenge for homeless people, according to new research by St. Michael's Hospital. Twenty-five per cent of Canadians say they have continuous or intermittent chronic pain lasting six months or more. The number is likely to be even higher among homeless people, in part due to frequent injuries. Of the 152 residents of homeless shelters with chronic pain studied by Dr. Stephen Hwang, more than one-third (37 per cent) had Chronic Pain Grade IV, the highest ...

Nanotechnology for water filter

Nanotechnology for water filter
2011-07-22
This release is available in German. Nanotechnology has developed tremendously in the past decade and was able to create many new materials with a vast range of potential applications. Carbon nanotubes are an example of these new materials and consist of cylindrical molecules of carbon with diameters of a few nanometers – one nanometer is one millionth of a millimeter. Carbon nanotubes possess exceptional electronic, mechanical and chemical properties, for example they can be used to clean polluted water. Scientists of the University of Vienna had recently published ...

Fingerprinting fugitive dust

2011-07-22
This release is available in Spanish. Each community of soil microbes has a unique fingerprint that can potentially be used to track soil back to its source, right down to whether it came from dust from a rural road or from a farm field, according to a U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) soil scientist. Ann Kennedy, at the Agricultural Research Service (ARS) Land Management and Water Conservation Research Unit in Pullman, Wash., studies the biological properties of soils that affect wind erosion. She analyses the soil for the fatty acid or lipid content from the community ...

Study: Subsidizing wages at long-term care facilities would cut turnover

Study: Subsidizing wages at long-term care facilities would cut turnover
2011-07-22
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Subsidizing the wages of caregivers at group homes would likely reduce worker turnover rates and help contain costs at long-term care facilities, according to new University of Illinois research. Elizabeth T. Powers, a professor of economics and faculty member of the Institute of Government and Public Affairs at Illinois, says that a government-sponsored wage-subsidy program could reduce the churn of low-wage caregivers through group homes by one-third. "High rates of worker turnover have costs, and there aren't a lot incentives for the agencies that ...

Stronger social safety net leads to decrease in stress, childhood obesity

Stronger social safety net leads to decrease in stress, childhood obesity
2011-07-22
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Social safety net programs that reduce psychosocial stressors for low-income families also ultimately lead to a reduction in childhood obesity, according to research by a University of Illinois economist who studies the efficacy of food assistance programs on public health. Craig Gundersen, a professor of agricultural and consumer economics at Illinois, says food and exercise alone are not to blame for the extent of obesity among children in the United States. Psychosocial factors, such as stressors brought about by uncertainty about the economy, income ...

Executive pay reform unlikely to reduce systemic risk in economy

Executive pay reform unlikely to reduce systemic risk in economy
2011-07-22
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Reforms aimed at curbing executive compensation will likely have little effect on reducing systemic risk in the financial system, and they may even have unintended consequences for the freedom to contract, according to a University of Illinois expert in business law and corporate finance. In a paper published in the Ohio State Entrepreneurial Business Law Journal, law professor Christine Hurt argues that giving regulators unprecedented power to prohibit certain types of private compensation under the guise of minimizing systemic risk in the financial ...

Study: Regulatory hurdles hinder biofuels market

Study: Regulatory hurdles hinder biofuels market
2011-07-22
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Regulatory hurdles abound for the successful commercialization of emerging liquid biofuels, which hold the promise of enhancing U.S. energy security, reducing greenhouse gas emissions and serving as a driver for rural economic development, according to new U. of I. research. In the study, University of Illinois law professor Jay P. Kesan and Timothy A. Slating, a regulatory associate with the University of Illinois Energy Biosciences Institute, argue that regulatory innovations are needed to keep pace with technological innovations in the biofuels industry. "Getting ...

Chance favors the concentration of wealth, U of M study shows

2011-07-22
Most of our society's wealth is invested in businesses or other ventures that may or may not pan out. Thus, chance plays a role in where the wealth of a society will end up. But does chance favor the concentration of wealth in the hands of a few, or does it tend to level the playing field? Three University of Minnesota researchers have built a simplified model that isolates the effects of chance and found that it consistently pushes wealth into the hands of a few, ever-richer people. The study, "Entrepreneurs, chance, and the deterministic concentration of wealth," ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

NASA’s Webb telescope finds bizarre atmosphere on a lemon-shaped exoplanet

The gut bacteria that put the brakes on weight gain in mice

Exploring how patients feel about AI transcription

Category ‘6’ tropical cyclone hot spots are growing

Video: Drivers struggle to multitask when using dashboard touch screens, study finds

SLU research shows surge in alcohol-related liver disease driving ‘deaths of despair’

Rising heat reshapes how microbes break down microplastics, new review finds

Roots reveal a hidden carbon pathway in maize plants

Membrane magic: FAMU-FSU researchers repurpose fuel cells membranes for new applications

UN Member States pledge to increase access to diagnosis and inhaled medicines for the 480 million people living with COPD

Combination therapy shows potential to treat pediatric brain cancer ATRT

Study links seabird nesting to shark turf wars in Hawai‘i

Legal sports betting linked to sharp increases in violent crime, study finds

Breakthrough AI from NYUAD speeds up discovery of life-supporting microbes

New Eva Mayr-Stihl Foundation funding initiative boosts research at University of Freiburg on adaptation of forests to global change

The perfect plastic? Plant-based, fully saltwater degradable, zero microplastics

Bias in data may be blocking AI’s potential to combat antibiotic resistance

Article-level metrics would provide more recognition to most researchers than journal-level metrics

Satiety’s little helper: Protein that supports appetite regulating protein identified

UF dives deep into predicting storm damage with computer models

A stormy ocean voyage yields insights on the global carbon cycle

Scientists identify first non-coding gene that controls cell size

Demonstration of altermagnetism in RuO₂ thin films -- A new magnetic material for the AI era

Penn researchers awarded $25M to conduct trial using smartphones to fight heart disease

PCORI awards funding for new patient-centered healthcare research

Exploring the origins of the universe: 145 low-noise amplifiers complete ALMA telescopes

Empress cicada wings help illuminate molecular structure

Using sound waves to detect helium

Time burden in patients with metastatic breast and ovarian cancer from clinic and home demands

Researchers discover bias in AI models that analyze pathology samples

[Press-News.org] Scavenger cells accomplices to viruses