Virus-mimicking TB may offer therapeutic opportunities

Tuberculosis (TB) bacteria release a section of DNA, a virus-mimicking molecule called c-di-AMP, and its behaviour offers drug and vaccine possibilities. In the image, micrograph of the TB bacteria

The molecular mechanisms involved in immune responses to bacterial infections are generally well understood – except for tuberculosis (TB). A study in Nature Medicine
[1]
(online, 2 March 2015) shows that TB bacteria release a section of DNA, a virus-mimicking molecule called c-di-AMP, and its behaviour offers drug and vaccine possibilities.

TB bacteria were engineered to produce different levels of c-di-AMP: a correlation with immune response (INF-beta protein levels) was identified. Crucially, c-di-AMP also affected bacterial growth, with higher levels increasing autophagy. Survival in mice infected with TB bacteria engineered to overproduce c-di-AMP more than doubled (321 days) compared with mice infected with normal TB (150 days).

“We still don’t know if altering c-di-AMP levels can affect outcomes in humans, but this study does suggest that it is well worth looking into,” says co-author William Bishai from the Center for Tuberculosis Research, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland.

References

[1] Dey B, Jain Dey R, Cheung LS et al. A bacterial cyclic dinucleotide activates the cytosolic surveillance pathway and mediates innate resistance to tuberculosis. Nature Medicine 2015. doi:10.1038/nm.3813.

Last updated
Citation
The Pharmaceutical Journal, PJ, 7 March 2015, Vol 294, No 7852;294(7852):DOI:10.1211/PJ.2015.20068031

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