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July
01, 2005
Researchers Boost White Blood Cells’ Ability
to Kill Bacteria
By Sherry Seethaler
Scientists at UCSD
have determined how white blood cells up the ante against invading
bacteria, a finding that may lead to new treatments for infections
including those caused by invasive—“flesh-eating”—
Streptococcus bacteria.
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Carole
Peyssonnaux, postdoctoral researcher who spearheaded
the research
Credit: Laurent Rivierre, UCSD
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The findings, which
are published in the July, 2005 issue of The Journal of
Clinical Investigation, represent a collaborative effort
between the laboratories of Randall Johnson, UCSD professor
of biology and Victor Nizet, associate professor of pediatrics
at the UCSD School of Medicine.
The research team discovered
that white blood cells respond directly to Streptococcus, Staphylococcus,
Salmonella, and other bacteria that cause disease in humans,
by increasing their levels of a protein known as hypoxia inducible
transcription factor-1, or HIF-1. The protein, in turn, stimulates
white blood cells to release antimicrobial compounds that kill
bacteria. The team also found that treating white blood cells
with chemicals to increase HIF-1 levels could enhance the cells’
capacity to kill bacteria.
“These findings
suggest a potential novel approach to treatment of difficult
infections such as those produced by antibiotic resistant bacteria
or those affecting patients with weakened immune systems due
to chronic disease, cancer chemotherapy or AIDS,” said
Nizet. “Rather than designing drugs to target the bacteria,
medications that promote HIF-1 activity could be used to boost
the bacterial killing ability of white blood cells and promote
the resolution of infection through the actions of our natural
immune defenses.”
Previous work by Johnson
and colleagues showed that low oxygen levels, such as those
found at the site of an infection, activate HIF-1 in macrophages
and neutrophils—white blood cells that ingest and destroy
microorganisms. In the current study, the researchers compared
how well macrophages in which HIF-1 levels were elevated, normal
or zero could kill bacteria, including Streptococcus isolated
from a patient with flesh-eating disease. They found that the
greater the HIF-1 levels in white blood cells, the greater their
bacterial killing power. They also found that mice lacking HIF-1
in their macrophages and neutrophils were less able to combat
skin infections than normal mice.
“A direct correlation
was established between the levels of HIF-1 present in the mouse
macrophages and neutrophils and how efficiently the cells were
able to kill the bacteria,” said lead author Carole Peyssonnaux,
a postdoctoral researcher with professors Johnson and
Nizet.
The HIF-1 protein is
known to bind to cellular DNA and activate specific genes to
help cells function is a low oxygen environment. The researchers
found that in white blood cells, HIF-1 stimulates the production
of small proteins, enzymes and nitric oxide, which work together
to kill invading bacteria.
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Graphic
depicting HIF-1 control of white blood cells’ bacterial
killing efficiency
Credit: Victor Nizet, UCSD |
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“The placement
of essential microbial killing functions of white blood cells
under regulation of HIF-1 represents an elegant controlled response
system,” explained Johnson. “The white blood cells
are in a resting state as they circulate in the oxygen-rich
bloodstream, but can then be activated in response to the declining
oxygen gradient encountered upon migration to sites of infection.
Direct encounter with the bacteria then activates the neutrophils
and macrophages maximally. Under HIF-1 regulation, antimicrobial
genes are expressed only in infected tissues and not in healthy
tissues where they could produce unwanted inflammatory damage.”
Recognition of the
essential role for HIF-1 in the bacterial killing ability of
white blood cells led the researchers to explore potential medical
implications of this discovery. With the assistance of Emmanuel
Theodorakis, UCSD professor of chemistry and biochemistry, a
group of pharmacologic agents that act to increase cellular
HIF-1 levels was selected. These compounds significantly enhanced
the capacity of macrophages to kill bacteria.
“Our findings
offer proof of concept that small molecules can have a beneficial
effect by modulating the production of HIF-1 protein in white
blood cells,” said Theodorakis.
This research was financed
by grants from the National Institutes of Health and the Edward
Mallinckrodt, Jr. Foundation. Other authors contributing to
the study were Vivekanand Datta, MD, UCSD graduate student in
molecular pathology, Andrew Doedens, UCSD graduate student in
biological sciences, Nancy Hurtado-Ziola, UCSD graduate student
in biomedical sciences, Thorsten Cramer, MD, a gastroenterologist
at Charite-Hochschulmedizin in Berlin, Germany, and Richard
Gallo, MD, PhD, UCSD professor of medicine and pediatrics.
Media Contact:
Sherry Seethaler (858)
534-4656
Comment:
Randall S. Johnson
(858) 699-1634
(reachable at this number in Sweden from 9 a.m. noon Pacific
Time),
Victor Nizet (858) 534-7408
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