The National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation, the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and the Life Sciences Research Foundation funded the research. In addition to researchers at the Hutchinson Center and University of Utah School of Medicine, the study also involved collaborators at the University of Washington School of Medicine.
At Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, our interdisciplinary teams of world-renowned scientists and humanitarians work together to prevent, diagnose and treat cancer, HIV/AIDS and other diseases. Our researchers, including three Nobel laureates, bring a relentless pursuit and passion for health, knowledge and hope to their work and to the world. For more information, please visit www.fhcrc.org.
Researchers uncover how poxviruses such as smallpox evolve rapidly -- despite low mutation rates
Study reveals novel 'accordion-like' means of viral adaptation against host viral defenses
2012-08-16
(Press-News.org) SEATTLE – Poxviruses, a group of DNA-containing viruses that includes smallpox, are responsible for a wide range of diseases in humans and animals. They are highly virulent and able to cross species barriers, yet how they do so has been largely a mystery because of their low mutation rates.
While smallpox was considered officially eradicated by the World Health Organization in 1980, concerns about its use as a bioterrorism agent – and the finding that other poxviruses, such as monkeypox, can be transmitted from animals to humans – have spurred renewed interest in understanding how they replicate. Having this information in hand could lead to the development of better antiviral strategies.
New research from scientists at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center and collaborating institutions has uncovered how poxviruses evolve to rapidly adapt against host defenses – despite their low mutation rates.
The discovery provides new insight into how large, double-stranded DNA viruses evade host immunity and become drug resistant, and it has particular implications for understanding the mechanisms of infectious-disease transmission between animals and humans.
Senior author Harmit S. Malik, Ph.D., a member of the Hutchinson Center's Basic Sciences Division, and first author Nels C. Elde, Ph.D., a former postdoctoral researcher in Malik's lab, describe their findings online ahead of the Aug. 17 print issue of Cell.
"Poxviruses encode a variety of genes that help them to counter host immune defenses and promote infection," said Elde, now an assistant professor of human genetics at the University of Utah School of Medicine. "Despite ample evidence that the poxvirus genome can undergo adaptive changes to overcome evolving host defenses, we still don't know that much about the mechanisms involved in that adaptation."
To determine the mechanisms of adaptation, Elde, Malik and colleagues conducted an experiment in cell culture using vaccinia virus, the type of poxvirus used in the smallpox vaccine, to mimic viral adaptation and evolution as it occurs in nature.
Previous research had demonstrated that a host-defense protein called protein kinase R (PKR) is a major hurdle to poxvirus infection. In response, poxviruses have evolved to overcome PKR by encoding two genes, K3L and E3L, which thwart host-defense mechanisms that normally prevent viral infection.
The team studied how vaccinia virus, when altered to delete the E3L gene, evolved to successfully replicate in the presence of human PKR.
"Dramatically, serial propagation of this 'weaker' virus rapidly resulted in strains that became much more successful at replicating in human cells," said Malik, who is also an Early Career Scientist of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
Closer examination of their mode of adaptation revealed that the virus was quickly able to defeat PKR by selectively increasing the number of copies of the K3L gene in its genome.
Malik likened this rapid adaptation to the expansion of the bellows of a musical accordion. "As the K3L copy number increased in subsequent rounds of replication, so did expression of the K3L protein and subsequent inhibition of the immune response," he said. This showed that viruses that can quickly expand their genome have an immediate evolutionary advantage over those that cannot.
In a further extension of the accordion analogy, in addition to observing rapid gene expansion in the E3L-deficient strain of vaccinia, the researchers also observed that the virus contracted after acquiring an adaptive mutation, swapping a beneficial mutation for a smaller genomic footprint.
"Our studies suggest that despite their transient nature, gene expansions may provide a potent means of adaptation in poxviruses, allowing them to survive either immune or pharmacological challenges," Malik said. "Recognizing the means by which they undergo this expansion may provide more effective antiviral strategies against these and related important pathogens."
INFORMATION:
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Study underscores need to improve communication with moms of critically ill infants
2012-08-16
Irish playwright George Bernard Shaw once described England and America as two countries separated by a common language.
Now research from the Johns Hopkins Children's Center suggests that common language may also be the divide standing between mothers of critically ill newborns and the clinicians who care for them.
The study, published August 16 in the Journal of Perinatology, found that miscommunication was common, and that the most serious breakdown in communication occurred when mothers and clinicians discussed the severity of the baby's condition. Misunderstanding ...
Poxviruses defeat antiviral defenses by duplicating a gene
2012-08-16
SALT LAKE CITY – Scientists have discovered that poxviruses, which are responsible for smallpox and other diseases, can adapt to defeat different host antiviral defenses by quickly and temporarily producing multiple copies of a gene that helps the viruses to counter host immunity. This discovery provides new insight into the ability of large double-stranded DNA viruses to undergo rapid evolution despite their low mutation rates, according to a study published by University of Utah researchers in the Aug. 17, 2012, issue of Cell.
Poxviruses are a group of DNA-containing ...
A male contraceptive pill in the making?
2012-08-16
VIDEO:
Dr. James Bradner talks about how he and other researchers at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Baylor College of Medicine used a small molecule compound to generate reversible birth control in...
Click here for more information.
BOSTON—The development of a male contraceptive pill has long proven to be elusive, but findings from a new study may point scientists in the right direction to making oral birth control for men a reality.
Researchers at Dana-Farber Cancer ...
Discovery of immune cells that protect against multiple sclerosis offers hope for new treatment
2012-08-16
In multiple sclerosis, the immune system attacks nerves in the brain and spinal cord, causing movement problems, muscle weakness and loss of vision. Immune cells called dendritic cells, which were previously thought to contribute to the onset and development of multiple sclerosis, actually protect against the disease in a mouse model, according to a study published by Cell Press in the August issue of the journal Immunity. These new insights change our fundamental understanding of the origins of multiple sclerosis and could lead to the development of more effective treatments ...
Scripps Research scientists find an important molecular trigger for wound-healing
2012-08-16
LA JOLLA, CA – August 16, 2012 – Scientists at The Scripps Research Institute have made a breakthrough in understanding a class of cells that help wounds in skin and other epithelial tissues heal, uncovering a molecular mechanism that pushes the body into wound-repair mode.
The findings, which appear in an advance, online version of the Immunity on August 16, 2012, focus on cells known as γδ (gamma delta) T cells. The new study demonstrates a skin-cell receptor hooks up with a receptor on γδ T-cells to stimulate wound healing.
"This is a major activation ...
Invasive brittle star species hits Atlantic Ocean
2012-08-16
Coral Reefs, the Journal of the International Society for Reef Studies, has published online a study co-written by Dr. Gordon Hendler of the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County (NHM) about an invasive species of brittle star, Ophiothela mirabilis. The species was previously restricted to Pacific waters, but surprisingly, growing populations have established themselves at distant points in the Atlantic. Its presence near Brazilian and Caribbean ports indicates that O. mirabilis could have been spread by shipping.
The marine animal is colorful and six-rayed. It ...
Some like it hot: Tropical species 'not as vulnerable' to climate change extinction
2012-08-16
In the face of a changing climate many species must adapt or perish. Ecologists studying evolutionary responses to climate change forecast that cold-blooded tropical species are not as vulnerable to extinction as previously thought. The study, published in the British Ecological Society's Functional Ecology, considers how fast species can evolve and adapt to compensate for a rise in temperature.
The research, carried out at the University of Zurich, was led by Dr Richard Walters, now at Reading University, alongside David Berger now at Uppsala University and Wolf Blanckenhorn, ...
Yoga: A cost-effective treatment for back pain sufferers?
2012-08-16
Specialised group yoga classes could provide a cost-effective way of treating patients with chronic or recurrent low back pain, according to the UK's largest ever study of the benefits of yoga.
Led by the University of York, and funded by Arthritis Research UK, the study provides an evaluation of a specially-developed 12-week group yoga intervention programme compared to conventional general practitioner (GP) care alone.
The results published in Spine, show that the yoga intervention programme – 'Yoga for Healthy Lower Backs' - is likely to be cost effective for both ...
Tibetan Plateau may be older than previously thought
2012-08-16
The growth of high topography on the Tibetan Plateau in Sichuan, China, began much earlier than previously thought, according to an international team of geologists who looked at mountain ranges along the eastern edge of the plateau.
The Indian tectonic plate began its collision with Asia between 55 and 50 million years ago, but "significant topographic relief existed adjacent to the Sichuan Basin prior to the Indo-Asian collision," the researchers report online in Nature Geoscience.
"Most researchers have thought that high topography in eastern Tibet developed during ...
Added benefit of eribulin in breast cancer is not proven
2012-08-16
Eribulin (trade name: Halaven®) was approved in March 2011 for women with locally advanced or metastasizing breast cancer in whom the disease has progressed despite prior drug therapy.
In an early benefit assessment pursuant to the "Act on the Reform of the Market for Medicinal Products" (AMNOG), the German Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care (IQWiG) examined whether eribulin offers an added benefit compared with the present standard therapy.
According to the results of the assessment, the currently available evidence provides "hints" that eribulin ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
The Drug Target Discovery Institute of Korea University successfully held opening symposium
UNM astronomers confirm new gas giant exoplanet with help from citizen scientists worldwide
Electrochemical catheter hub could prevent bloodstream infections
Spotting bad batteries before they malfunction
Grip strength gives researchers a new handle on psychosis
Metals found in disposable e-cigarette vapor could pose health risks
Disposable e-cigarettes more toxic than traditional cigarettes
Technical refinement in airway surgery: Wrapping tracheobronchial anastomoses
Understanding how a key protein helps aggressive blood cancer grow, paving the way for targeted therapies
Uncovering the role of vitamin C in skin regeneration
Advancing regenerative agriculture: TUdi unveils new digital tools for soil health monitoring
More staff addressing mental health in schools buffers toll of growing up in disadvantaged communities
Still top cause of death, the types of heart disease people are dying from is changing
Scientists detect deep Earth pulses beneath Africa
As fewer Americans die from heart attacks, more succumb to chronic heart disease
Guidance issued for GPs managing weight-loss injection patients
Low-cost carbon capture? Bury wood debris in managed forests
Scientists unravel mystery of Mycetoma grain formation
Exposure to particulate matter during pregnancy is associated with an increased risk of childhood obesity
How a propolis compound with health benefits interacts with cell membranes: Study reveals nymphaeol a in action
Flawed impact metrics jeopardize EU deregulation plans, study finds
New study calls for rethink on alcohol policy
New Danish research centre to make designed proteins with vast potential
Thin-film research enters new era with innovative AI approach
Smart amplifier enabler for more qubits in future quantum computers
Following the tracks of an extremely adaptive bacterium
New ‘designer drugs’ pose growing threat to road safety in the US
Tackling depressive symptoms in high school students by honing emotional and social skills
One in five US foods and drinks contain synthetic dyes, study shows
One in five packaged foods and drinks sold in the United States contains synthetic dyes, study shows
[Press-News.org] Researchers uncover how poxviruses such as smallpox evolve rapidly -- despite low mutation ratesStudy reveals novel 'accordion-like' means of viral adaptation against host viral defenses