Protein that boosts immunity to viruses and cancer


London, April 18 (IANS): Scientists have discovered a protein that plays a critical role in promoting immunity to viruses and cancer, opening the door to new therapies.

Experiments in mice and human cells have shown that the protein promotes the proliferation of cytotoxic T cells, which kill cancer cells and cells infected with viruses.

"Cancer cells have ways to suppress T cell activity, helping them to escape the immune system," said lead researcher professor Philip Ashton-Rickardt from Imperial College London.

Cytotoxic T cells are an important component of the immune system, but when faced with serious infections or advanced cancer, they are often unable to proliferate in large enough quantities to fight the disease.

By screening mice with genetic mutations, the Imperial team discovered a strain of mice that produced 10 times as many cytotoxic T cells when infected with a virus compared with normal mice.

These mice suppressed the infection more effectively, and were more resistant to cancer.

They also produced more of a second type of T cells, memory cells, enabling them to recognise infections they have encountered previously and launch a rapid response.

The mice with enhanced immunity produced high levels of a hitherto unknown protein, which the researchers named lymphocyte expansion molecule, or LEM.

They went on to show that LEM modulates the proliferation of human T cells as well as in mice.

The discovery was unexpected because the new protein had no known function and doesn't resemble any other protein.

The researchers now aim to develop a gene therapy designed to improve immunity by boosting the production of LEM.

"Genetically engineering T cells to augment their ability to fight cancer has been a goal for some time.

"By introducing an active version of the LEM gene into the T cells of cancer patients, we hope, we can provide a robust treatment for patients," Ashton-Rickardt said.

The study was published in the journal Science.

 

  

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  • Vadim Shapoval, Ukraine

    Fri, Apr 24 2015

    Scientists, Proteins, Scientific Conspiracy Theories and Father of Oncology. Scientists have uncovered a protein that not only boosts immunity to cancer but also has the ability to fight viruses, an unexpected discovery because the protein previously had no known function and was unlike any other protein. Not all scientific conspiracy theories are wrong, the Father of Oncology explains. Conspiracy theories are immensely popular today. Conspiracy theories are easy to propagate and difficult to refute. Cancer is the name given to a collection of related diseases cancer can start almost anywhere in the human body, which is made up of trillions of cells, the U.S. National Cancer Institute says. Cancer is a disease of iron-overloaded cells. Proteins are constructed from a set of 20 amino acids and have distinct three-dimensional shapes. At the cellular level, cancer occurs when cellular iron overload chaotically affects cellular molecules (proteins are large cellular molecules) and organelles, the Father of Oncology says. Primary tumors always develop at body sites of excessive iron deposits. Personalized clinical iron-deficiency methods can neutralize micrometastases. Surgery (ceramic blades) and direct intratumoral injections of iron-deficiency agents (ceramic needles) can eliminate tumors and metastases. Cancer costs the world economy nearly US$3 trillion every year. That is why scientific iron/cancer information-1905-2015 is largely ignored. One day, cancer will be chained to the iron chains, Vanga said. Personalized clinical iron-deficiency methods can neutralize HIV. Understanding how iron metabolism and viral infection interact might suggest new iron-deficiency methods to control HIV. Scientists can refute scientific conspiracy theories. http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/opinions/184574

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