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OKLAHOMA CITY, June
21, 2006 – For many years, researchers believed that stem cells in the bone
marrow spent most of their existence in a slumber-like state, unaware of—and
unaffected by—the daily battles fought by the body’s immune system.
Not so.
Scientists at the Oklahoma Medical Research
Foundation have discovered that marrow stem cells—undifferentiated cells
that eventually give rise to the blood cells that fight infection—possess
receptors that recognize bacteria and viruses. When activated, these
receptors kick the stem cells and immature blood cells into action,
enlisting them to help fight whatever pathogen is attacking the body.
The findings, which appear in the new issue
of the journal Immunity, could have important implications for treating
leukemias and autoimmune diseases such as lupus and rheumatoid arthritis.
“We have long known that so-called
hematopoietic (blood) stem cells create the blood cells that are the
front-line soldiers in the body’s immune system,” said Paul Kincade, Ph.D.,
the senior author on the paper. “But we did not believe that infectious
agents played an active role in the process.”
“What we have now discovered is that these
stem cells have a sort of antennae that detect bacteria and viruses,”
continued the OMRF researcher. “And when stem cells receive these distress
signals, they spring to action, creating cells the body most needs early in
life-threatening situations.”
This messaging system normally serves as an
effective means of quickly replacing cells that are damaged or killed while
keeping us healthy. But investigators suspect that the system also can be
detrimental in certain circumstances—for example, in leukemia patients that
are vulnerable to infections after receiving bone marrow or cord blood
transplants or in autoimmune diseases like lupus, where immunosuppressive
treatments often leave the body subject to long-term infection.
“Scientists need to study stem cells and
leukemia cells in these diseases to determine if they are using this
messaging system,” said Kincade.
Another key, he said, will be to figure out
how best to control the receptors in stem cells. “It may be possible to
boost immunity when necessary and also shut down inappropriate responses.
That could provide a powerful tool to fight cancer, lupus and many other
diseases.”
In an accompanying commentary, Garnett Kelsoe,
a professor of immunology at Duke University, wrote that Kincade’s discovery
“merits widespread attention and will surely be the object of further
investigation." The paper, he said, “requires a new appraisal of just how
innate immunity and acquired immunity are intertwined."
The research, which was led by Kincade and
Yoshinori Nagai, Ph.D., used purified stem cells obtained from the bone
marrow of laboratory mice. This type of stem cells, possessed by humans of
all ages, are not to be confused with embryonic stem cells, which are found
only in early-stage embryos.
Done in collaboration with researchers at the
University of Tokyo, Osaka University and Saga University (Japan), the
research was supported by grants from the National Institute of Allergy and
Infectious Disease.
Kincade heads the Immunobiology and Cancer
Research Program at OMRF, where he holds the William H. and Rita Bell Chair
in Biomedical Research. A former president of both the American Association
of Immunologists and the Federation of American Societies for Experimental
Biology, his laboratory focuses on understanding the development and
function of cells in the immune system.
About OMRF:
Celebrating its 60th birthday in 2006, OMRF (www.omrf.org)
is a nonprofit biomedical research institute dedicated to understanding and
curing human disease. Its scientists focus on such critical research areas
as Alzheimer’s disease, cancer, lupus and cardiovascular disease. It is home
to Oklahoma’s only member of the National Academy of Sciences. |