Islamabad, Dec 11: Johns Hopkins scientists have identified a previously unrecognized
step in the activation of infection-fighting white blood cells, the main
immunity troops in the body's war on bacteria, viruses and foreign
proteins.
"It's as if we knew many of the generals, colonels and majors
and now we have discovered a new officer that helps the troops carry out the
right battle plan," says Joel Pomerantz, Ph.D., an assistant professor of
Biological Chemistry in the Institute for Basic Biomedical Sciences and member
of the Institute for Cell Engineering at Johns Hopkins.
The discovery,
published in Molecular Cell also presents new opportunities to develop drugs to
enhance the immune system, or to slow down hyperactive immune cells in cases of
autoimmunity and cancer, Pomerantz says.
Faced with infection, the body's
white blood cells are commanded by a protein -- CARD11 -- to either make more
antibodies and white blood cells that attack the invader or to stand down and
abort the mission.
The new research shows that CARD11 is under the
control of GAKIN, another protein that supervises the directives given to each
white blood cell. Because of CARD11's importance in the decision-making process,
it needs a regulator to make sure it turns off when it's no longer needed to
avoid the risk of hyperactivity. If too many T or B cells, particular types of
white blood cells, are made or sent to battle infection, the consequences can be
cancer or autoimmune disease, Pomerantz says.
The discovery of GAKIN's
role in immune cell activation began when researchers attached the gene that
codes for luciferase -- a natural protein that makes fireflies glow -- to a gene
that CARD11 turns on in response to an infection. This allowed them to see when
a CARD11-responsive gene was turned on by measuring the amount of light released
from the cells. Pomerantz's group discovered that the more GAKIN protein they
added to the cells, the less the cells glowed, meaning that GAKIN represses
these genes' activation.
In other experiments, the researchers learned
that GAKIN has multiple ways of controlling CARD11 output. CARD11 can only turn
on if all of the other specific key regulatory proteins -- like a tactical team
-- are present. When researchers labeled the CARD11 protein with a red-colored
tag and watched it under a microscope inside a white blood cell, they could see
that CARD11 moved away from its tactical team activators to a different location
in the cell shortly after the cell was alerted of an infection. But, CARD11 hung
out longer with the tactical team activators in cells that had less GAKIN.
According to Pomerantz, GAKIN can control CARD11 by moving it to another
location in the cell away from the proteins that are needed to turn CARD11
on.
This work was supported by grants from the National Institutes of
Health and the American Cancer Society, as well as funds from the Johns Hopkins
University's Institute for Cell Engineering, a Ruth L. Kirschstein National
Research Service Award, a Kimmel Scholar Award and a Rita Allen Foundation
Scholar Award. Additional authors of the study are Rebecca Lamason and Abraham
Kupfer of Johns Hopkins University School of
Medicine.
Ends
SA/EN
Home »
» There's a new 'officer' in the infection control army
There's a new 'officer' in the infection control army
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment