July 12, 2004
UCSD Biologists
Discover Cell's Defense Mechanism
Against Class Of Disease-Causing Bacterial Toxins
By Kim McDonald
Biologists at the University of California, San Diego have discovered a new
mechanism that allows cells to fight a class of toxins made by a wide
variety of disease-causing bacteria.
Their discovery,
detailed in this week’s early online edition of the Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences, could eventually pave the way for the
development of new, more effective treatments for bacterial diseases that
kill or sicken millions of people each year, such as pneumonia, strep
throat, scarlet fever, rheumatic fever and toxic shock syndrome.
The essential
achievement in the UCSD discovery is the team’s finding that animal cells,
from roundworms to mammals, have a natural defense mechanism to ward off
certain kinds of bacteria that secrete toxins in order to form tiny holes
in the membranes of the cells they infect. Scientists estimate that such
“pore-forming” bacterial toxins account for approximately one-quarter of
the known protein “virulence factors” that increase the infection and severity
of a bacterial-caused disease.
|
Photo
of normal roundworms (top) and ill roundworms (bottom) without gene that
permits resistance to pore-forming toxin |
“For the first time, we
have provided a glimpse of how the innate animal immune system reacts to
protect itself against a major bacterial virulence system,” says Raffi V.
Aroian, an associate professor of biology at UCSD who headed the team. “By
learning how we can enhance and protect that defense mechanism in human
cells, we can help protect people from many kinds of serious bacterial
infections.”
Pore-forming bacterial
toxins are used by bacteria such as Staphylococcus aureus, the
most common cause of hospital-acquired infections, which affects some
500,000 patients each year in U.S. hospitals, and Streptococcus
pneumoniae, the bacterium responsible for seven million cases of
otitis media in children and 500,000 cases of pneumonia in children and
adults in the United States each year. The toxins also play a major role in
infections from Helicobacter pylori, a bacterium that causes
ulcers; Legionella pneumophila, which is responsible for
Legionnaire’s disease; and Streptococcus pyogenes, which can lead
to strep throat, scarlet fever, the skin infection impetigo, pneumonia,
acute kidney inflammation, toxic shock syndrome, acute rheumatic fever,
rheumatic heart disease and the flesh-eating disease known as necrotizing
fasciitis.
Researchers in Aroian’s
laboratory discovered several years ago that the roundworm C. elegans
and other nematodes can be killed or made seriously ill by a pore-forming
toxin known as Cry5B. That toxin is produced by Bacillus thuringiensis,
the bacterium commonly known as Bt, which is used by organic farmers as a
natural pesticide to control insect pests on crops. Although Cry5B can’t
hurt humans because the toxin doesn’t recognize human cells, it hurts worms
in a manner similar to the pore-forming toxins that affect humans.
Aroian and his student
discovered that when C. elegans is exposed to either a low dose of
Cry5B toxin for a long period of time or a high dose of the toxin for a short
period of time, as might occur in nature, the roundworms recover and
continue to survive. Recognizing that this natural defense mechanism to a
pore-forming toxin could have application to human bacterial infections,
Aroian and Danielle Huffman, a graduate student in his laboratory and the
first author of the research paper, set about to determine the biochemical
and genetic mechanisms that allowed the worms to do this.
Huffman and Roman
Sasik, a postdoctoral fellow working with Jacques Corbeil at UCSD’s medical
school, developed a way to determine which roundworm genes were activated
when they came into contact with the pore-forming Cry5B toxin and an
equivalent dose of cadmium, a toxic heavy metal. Some of the genes
activated by one toxin were activated by the other, but the scientists
found that some were not, including two that were known to play important
and general roles in immunity in humans. However, these genes had never
been shown to be important for protecting against this class of bacterial toxin.
Aroian and Huffman
further discovered that these two genes, SEK1 and KGB1, controlled two
“pathways” of biochemical reactions that are essential in allowing
roundworms to survive a 30 minute exposure to a high dose of Cry5B toxin.
Roundworms missing either of the two genes were hypersensitive to Cry5B and
quickly died after such an exposure to a high dose of toxin or to a low,
chronic dose of toxin, the scientists found.
Working with Laurence
Abrami and F. Gisou van der Goot of the University of Geneva, the
scientists found the same basic responses in hamster kidney cells with and
without one of the two genes. These cells were exposed to aerolysin, the
pore-forming toxin from Aeromonas hydrophila, an
antibiotic-resistant bacterium that causes lesions and illness in humans.
The results from this second experiment suggest that the gene and the
biochemical pathways it controls are a generalized, natural defense
mechanism to pore-forming toxins in mammalian cells as well as in
roundworms.
Now that scientists
have a basic understanding of the biochemical mechanisms that enable cells
to defend themselves against pore-forming toxins, biomedical researchers
can begin to develop drugs against the rising tide of antibiotic-resistant
strains of Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus pneumoniae,
and other bacteria that use pore-forming toxins in their arsenals.
“Now that we know how
cells defend themselves, we can think about developing therapeutic agents
to improve a person’s defenses against pathogenic bacteria that use this
class of toxins,” says Aroian. “You can’t fight something you don’t
understand, but now we are starting to get a very basic understanding of
how a major class of virulence factors works. In addition we have now the
tools to try to understand this in greater detail.”
Funding for the project
was provided by grants from the National Science Foundation,
Burroughs-Wellcome Foundation and Beckman Foundation.
Media Contact: Kim McDonald (858) 534-7572
Comment: Raffi Aroian (858)
822-1396