Centipede venom trumps morphine in mouse study of pain

Centipede picturePlacing a Chinese red headed centipede on a burn can speed up the healing process, according to ancient Chinese medicine. But a mouse study published today suggests that what the Chinese interpreted as a healing effect may in fact have been the handiwork of a pain-inhibiting peptide contained within this centipede’s venom, which kills insects but is harmless in humans. The results indicate that the peptide, called m-SLPTX-Ssm6a, is a powerful analgesic that, in some cases, surpasses the effect of morphine. Given its apparent lack of side effects, Ssm6a is seen by scientists as an attractive candidate drug compound that might prove suitable for treating chronic pain.

Researchers first discovered Ss6ma’s effect by screening it, and other peptides, for the ability to inhibit Nav 1.7, a channel located on the surface of nerve cells that allows sodium to transmit pain signals when the cell membrane is depolarized. Nav 1.7’s importance in pain signaling came to light in 2006 when researchers linked mutations in the channel to a rare genetic condition in which people are unable to perceive pain. The finding led many researchers to suggest developing pain medications composed of small molecules that could block the channel.

But there was a problem with this approach: Nav 1.7 is one of nine types of so-called ‘voltage-gated sodium channels’, all endowed with similar channel entrances that, if blocked all at once, would lead to major neurological malfunctions including cardiac arrest. “This makes it really hard to get selectivity,” explains Glenn King, a structural biologist of the University of Queensland, Australia, and a co-author of the study, which appears in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Luckily, he says, “toxins found in venoms are much bigger,” so their action does not take place at the channel entrance.

Continue reading

Cytomegalovirus—a ‘stealth’ pathogen—gains attention in the drug development realm

OCytomegalovirus is sometimes called ‘the stealth virus’ because many people, including more than 50% of adults in the US, harbor the infection. But few individuals ever feel the effects of CMV unless something else squelches their immune system first—such as the immunosuppressing drugs given before a bone marrow transplant. Wherever the virus gains a foothold, it can create serious problems such as pneumonia, unrelenting diarrhea or inflammation in the eye. It’s also the most common viral infection in newborns and 1 out of every 750 infants born with CMV in the US will suffer permanent harm—hearing loss, brain damage, or even death—from this virus.

At present, more than three-quarters of people being treated for CMV infection who receive the antiviral drugs ganciclovir or valganciclovir respond to therapy. Both medications stop the virus from replicating, but they only work as long as the treatment is given. So the virus can make a comeback later on. Also, these drugs lower white blood cell counts, making it harder for the immune system to fight CMV on its own. If the virus develops resistance to these first-line drugs, then there are effective back-up treatments with foscarnet and cidofovir, but these compounds can cause kidney damage.

One new option, described in a paper published today in the New England Journal of Medicine, is an investigational drug called CMX001 that shows about the same efficacy as the current drugs. CMX001, also called brincidofovir, is a less-toxic, lipid-coated version of the current second-line drug, cidofovir. But this drug escapes the toxic kidney problems seen with cidofovir and doesn’t cause a drop in white blood cell counts. Additionally, CMX001 can be given in a pill form, an advantage over some of the other drugs used against CMV that must be injected intravenously.

“There’s a perception in the scientific community that we need to do better in our treatments for cytomegalovirus. This drug is better than what we’ve had,” says first author on the paper Francisco Marty, an oncologist at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston.

Continue reading

Surprising epigenetic switch for ‘natural killer’ cells eyed for cancer therapy

NKcellsNatural killer cells are the instant assassins of the immune system with the ability to destroy foreign invaders and cancer cells at first sight. Although scientists have been studying how to harness the lethal abilities of these cells for more than three decades, little has been known about how these ‘NK’ cells develop from unspecialized immune cells. Now, researchers have discovered an enzyme that uses an epigenetic pathway—a process that modifies the way a cell’s DNA is read without actually changing the genetic blueprint itself—to boost the growth and function of NK cells.

NK cells could be a boon to cancer immunotherapy. These immune system soldiers are on constant surveillance duty, so it’s thought that they could eliminate the stray tumor cells that often elude chemotherapy. More than two dozen clinical trials to enhance NK activity against cancer are currently underway.

However, none of these drugs in development takes an epigenetic approach. That might be a mistake, in light of a study published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. A team of scientists led by Si-Yi Chen, an immunologist from the University of Southern California’s Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center in Los Angeles, shows that the enzyme MYSM1 (which stands for Myb-like, SWIRM and MPN domain-containing protein 1) controls the final steps of NK cell maturation through epigenetic changes. They suggest that increasing levels of this enzyme could help fight cancer by boosting the numbers of mature NK cells on patrol.

“It’s a very important contribution to our understanding of NK cell development,” says Porunelloor Mathew, a cancer immunologist at the University of North Texas Health Science Center in Fort Worth, who was not involved in the study.

Continue reading

Voting commences on research prize determined by public poll

It’s an off year in the US election cycle, which means that neither the President nor most members of Congress will face the voters come November. But that doesn’t mean you can’t still cast a ballot this fall. Today, the Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH) in Boston announced the finalists for the second annual BRIght Futures Prize, a $100,000 research contest in which the winner is decided by a public poll. Voting is now open through 21 November.

The BWH launched the prize last year in an effort to engage the public-at-large. First, the hospital’s Biomedical Research Institute (BRI) solicited grant proposals from BWH staff on various overarching themes: last year, those were personalized medicine and systems immunology; this year, the topics span the nine featured at the hospital’s ‘research day‘ in November (where the BRIght Futures Prize winner will be announced). Then, the BRI convened peer-review panels to winnow the applicants down to three finalists, each of whom made a short video to pitch their ideas to the public. (See my coverage of last year’s prize: ‘Biomedical grant awarded by ‘American Idol’-style public vote’.)

Last year’s winner was Robert Green, a clinical geneticist at BWH who proposed to sequence the genomes of 480 newborns, half from healthy babies and half from sick babies, in an effort to study how to use that information in routine medical care. Off the back of his BRIght Futures Prize, which served as a sort of pilot grant, earlier this month Green won a $6 million grant from the US National Human Genome Research Institute to roll out his plan in full. (See ‘Scientists to sequence genomes of hundreds of newborns’ from the Nature News blog.)

This year’s finalists include: Utkan Demirci*, a biomedical engineer who aims to advance a point-of-care microfluidic device for detecting levels blood levels of antiepileptic drugs; pharmacoepidemiologist Daniel Solomon and healthcare researcher Joel Weissman, who hope to create an online patient portal to streamline clinical trial enrollment and boost participation; and plastic surgeon Bohdan Pomahač and bioengineer Jeffrey Karp, who propose to develop a new generation of adhesive medical tapes based on biologically-inspired designs. (See my February 2013 news feature about Karp’s investigations of ‘biomimetic’ adhesives: ‘The sticking point’.)

You can watch all the finalists’ videos and read short descriptions of their research proposals here. Check them out, and then exercise your voting right!

*Update: Demirci was named the winner at the BWH Research Day on 21 November.

Months after an injury has healed, receptors involved in modulating pain remain active

shutterstock_139125542Pain researchers know that, in the immediate aftermath of a severe injury, pain sensitization pathways become active, causing the body to produce opioids—naturally occurring chemicals that inhibit pain by activating receptors. But a mouse study published today in Science reveals that a specific type of opioid receptor found on the surface of nerve cells remains hyperactive months after an injury has healed—a period much longer than previously thought. Moreover, blocking this receptor from binding opioids can produce opioid withdrawal, much like that experienced by people addicted to heroin or codeine. This finding suggests that opioids only serve to mask underlying pain, shedding light on why some chronic nature of pain disorders.

To study the long-term role of ‘endogenous’ opioids produced naturally by the body, scientists created an inflammatory response in the paws of mice by injecting a dose of toxic bacteria fragments. The researchers then allowed the injury to heal for a period of three weeks or more, all the while monitoring how sensitive the area was by using molecular biomarkers and recording how often the rodents made facial grimaces or withdrew their paws when the injured area was touched.

Six months on, once the injury had healed, the researchers administered naltrexone methobromide, a drug that blocks the receptors that can normally bind to opioids. Surprisingly, blocking the receptor’s activity caused the pain to return, even though considerable time had passed. Moreover, the mice also exhibited the telltale signs of opioid withdrawal, such as jumping, shaking and teeth chattering. “We think it’s possible that the body becomes dependent on the endogenous opioid system after an injury,” says neurobiologist and co-author Bradley Taylor, of the University of Kentucky in Lexington, “but this is speculative.” If these results are further validated, this could be the first recorded expression of what the researchers call ‘endogenous opioid withdrawal’.

Continue reading

In wake of Syrian chemical attacks, scientists seek to improve sarin antidotes

US Air Force officers administer a nerve agent autoinjector containing atropine and 2-PAM during a readiness exercise.

US Air Force officers administer a nerve agent autoinjector during a readiness exercise.{credit}US Air Force photo/Staff Sgt. Chrissy FitzGerald{/credit}

In the early hours of 21 August, doctors in Damascus area hospitals scrambled—often in vain—to save the lives of Syrian civilians brought to the hospital with foaming mouths and convulsions. Today, a report released by a United Nations inspection team confirms, as many have suspected, that the chemical weapon used in the attack was the deadly nerve gas sarin.

There are medical countermeasures proven to help counteract the poisoning of sarin and other organophosphate-based nerve agents such as soman and VX—some of which were available last month to Syrian victims. But “they have their limitations,” notes David Jett, director of the Countermeasures Against Chemical Threats (CounterACT) program at the US National Institutes of Health (NIH) in Bethesda, Maryland. Certain drug therapies don’t enter the brain well and none offers protection from the long-term effects of sarin exposure. So scientists have ratcheted up their efforts to improve the arsenal of antidotes against this particular chemical weapon and its lasting impact on the nervous system.

Sarin proves so fatal because it inhibits an enzyme called acetylcholinesterase (AChE). This enzyme normally degrades the neurotransmitter acetylcholine, a key signaling molecule that has numerous functions in the body, including facilitating cognitive function and triggering muscle contraction. Without functioning AChE, muscle fibers twitch uncontrollably and neurons in the brain become hyperactive, leading to seizures. If untreated, people exposed to sarin typically die of asphyxiation, as the muscles involved with breathing proceed to fire nonstop.

More than 1,400 people, including an estimated 426 children, died in the August gas attack, according to US intelligence estimates. Syrian doctors had only limited amounts of antidotes against the nerve gas, according to Sawsan Jabri, a trained physician who teaches biology courses at Oakland Community College in Eastern Michigan and serves as a spokeswoman for the US-based Syrian Expatriates Organization. She says that medical staff around Damascus (with whom she is in contact) had a total of some 50,000 ampoules of atropine, a drug that blocks the receptor responsible for binding acetylcholine, thereby preventing nerve and muscle cells from responding to the neurotransmitter. She adds that they also had “very limited amounts” of both pralidoxime (2-PAM)—a compound that reactivates sarin-inhibited AChE—and the anti-anxiety drug diazepam (better known as Valium), which prevents and treats seizures.

These three medicines—atropine, 2-PAM and diazepam—together constitute the ‘gold standard’ of anti-sarin therapies. As a matter of precaution, US military personnel are equipped with kits that contain spring-loaded syringes full of these antidotes, known as autoinjectors, which allow them to self-administer drugs through the muscle soon after, or better yet, before a chemical attack. But the therapeutic window is small, and prophylactic treatment is typically only feasible for military personnel, not civilians. So government defense agencies have long sought more robust and widely applicable alternatives to limit the death toll and mitigate permanent disability among survivors.

“There is a very vibrant research and development program in this area,” Jett says. He notes that the US government has been funding work in this area since “long before the chemical attacks in Syria, and even before the civilian attacks in Tokyo,” referring to the domestic terrorist attack on the Tokyo subway system in 1995, one of the first-ever uses of sarin as a chemical weapon. “We’re on this.”

Continue reading

Discovery of distinct peptides in brains of Alzheimer’s patients could help diagnosis

Alzheimer’s patients with different medical histories might possess distinct variants of amyloid beta fibrils—the basic component of the plaque-like deposits found in the brains of people with the disorder—according to study of two affected individuals published online today in the journal Cell. The findings hint at the existence of Alzheimer’s disease subcategories, and suggest a potential path forward to improving the diagnostic specificity of this devastating illness.

It’s thought by some scientists that the overproduction of amyloid beta peptides, or perhaps the failure to clear this peptide, can cause an accumulation of these molecules and the formation of fibrils in the brain, possibility leading to inflammation and neurotoxic effects.

Previous studies demonstrated that amyloid beta fibrils cultured in a test tube can present different molecular structures and can retain these structures when grown from short fibril fragments. To determine if different structures of these peptide chains are also present in human brains, the study’s researchers gently extracted amyloid fibrils from postmortem brain tissue taken from two Alzheimer’s patients who had different medical histories. One of the individuals received an Alzheimer’s diagnosis while still alive. The other was had initially been diagnosed with another form of dementia, but an autopsy that revealed the hallmark amyloid plaques in his her brain that indicated Alzheimer’s.

The researchers then used the extracted amyloid beta fibrils to seed the growth of isotopically-labeled amyloid samples in sufficient quantity for analysis. A close inspection of the peptides revealed that the fibrils grown from one patient seemed to have a periodic twist in their structure that was absent from those grown from the other patient’s sample, which grew fibrils with a constant diameter of 7 nanometers. Importantly, each of the patients possessed a single type of structure that did not overlap with that found in the other.

Continue reading

Experimental leishmaniasis vaccine could overcome challenge of multiple species

L. DonovaniMost of the 12 million people currently infected with leishmaniasis worldwide are also afflicted with poverty. The ‘black fever’ is caused by a single-cell parasite that gets passed from one person to another by the bite of a tiny sand fly and produces disfiguring skin lesions, severe mouth and throat ulcers, or swollen internal organs. In 2005, the ministers of India, Bangladesh, and Nepal committed to a ten-year plan to eliminate infections of Leishmania in their region. Two years later, the World Health Organization (WHO) adopted a resolution to take control of the disease.

The problem of defeating the pathogen is complicated, though, in part because there are more than 20 species of Leishmania, linked to three distinct clinical manifestations of the disease. In visceral leishmaniasis, the most fatal form, species such as Leishmania donovani infiltrate the liver, spleen, and bone marrow, crowding the host’s cells and overwhelming the immune system. A new study published today in Science Translational Medicine offers hope: immunologist Amitabha Mukhopadhyay of the India National Institute of Immunology in New Delhi and his colleagues describe a new vaccine that completely blocks the parasite from causing visceral leishmaniasis in mice and hamsters by targeting a receptor that they say is common to many forms of the parasite.

Progress in preventing visceral leishmaniasis would be welcome. Even though the disease can often be cured with antibiotics such as amphotericin B, or paromomycin, which is given with the anti-cancer drug miltefosine, these treatments can have severe side effects. Miltefosine has been linked with higher incidences of resistant forms of the disease. Also, for reasons the researchers don’t yet understand, drugs that work well against Leishmania infections in India are only about 80% effective against the same parasites in other regions, such as East Africa. “Visceral leishmaniasis has a pattern of causing outbreaks every eight to twelve years,” says Jorge Alvar, head of the leishmaniasis clinical program at the Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi), headquartered in Geneva. “So even if we had a good treatment, an effective vaccine would make a lot more sense.”

Continue reading

Lasker Awards go to rapid neurotransmitter release and modern cochlear implant

Lasker_logo 2

A very brainy area of research has scooped up one of this year’s $250,000 Lasker prizes, announced today: The Albert Lasker Basic Medical Research Award has gone to two researchers who shed light on the molecular mechanisms behind the rapid release of neurotransmitters—findings that have implications for understanding the biology of mental illnesses such as schizophrenia, as well the cellular functions underlying learning and memory formation.

By systematically analyzing proteins capable of quickly releasing chemicals in the brain, Genentech’s Richard Scheller and Stanford University’s Thomas Südhof advanced our understanding of how calcium ions regulate the fusion of vesicles with cell membranes during neurotransmission. Among Scheller’s achievements is the identification of three proteins—SNAP-25, syntaxin and VAMP/synaptobrevin—that have a vital role in neurotransmission and molecular machinery recycling. Moreover, Südhof’s observations elucidated how a protein called synaptotagmin functions as a calcium sensor, allowing these ions to enter the cell. Thanks to these discoveries, scientists were later able to understand how abnormalities in the function of these proteins contribute to some of the world’s most destructive neurological illnesses. (For an essay by Südhof on synaptotagmin, click here.)

The Lasker-DeBakey Clinical Medical Research Award went to three researchers whose work led to the development of the modern cochlear implant, which allows the profoundly deaf to perceive sound. During the 1960s and 1970s Greame Clark of the University of Melbourne and Ingeborg Hochmair, CEO of cochlear implant manufacturer MED-EL, independently designed implant components that, when combined, transformed acoustical information into electrical signals capable of exciting the auditory nerve. Duke University’s Blake Wilson later contributed his “continuous interleaved sampling” system, which gave the majority of cochlear implant wearers the ability to understand speech clearly without visual cues. (For a viewpoint by Graeme addressing the evolving science of cochlear implants, click here.)

Bill and Melinda Gates were also honored this year with the Lasker-Bloomberg Public Service Award. Through their foundation, the couple has made large investments in helping people living in developing countries gain access to vaccines and drugs. The Seattle-based Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation also runs programs to educate women about proper nutrition for their families and themselves. The organization has a broad mandate in public health; one of its most well known projects is the development of a low-cost toilet that will have the ability to operate without water.

The full collection of Lasker essays, as well as a Q&A between Lasker president Claire Pomeroy and the Gateses, can be found here.

Researchers less willing to share study details, according to journal’s survey

Researchers are increasingly reluctant to share the background details of their studies with other scientists according to new results from a survey of authors who published papers in the Annals of Internal Medicine in the last five years. This downward trend in researchers’ willingness to disclose such information is, unfortunately, at odds with the current surge in efforts to facilitate access to the types of study specifics that are vital to reproducing results.

Increasing transparency in research—by sharing the nitty-gritty details of studies that don’t make it into the published accounts, such as preliminary qualifying test results for clinical trial participants—is a hot topic. A report released on 29 March by the Institute of Medicine (IOM) based in Washington, DC, entitled “Sharing Clinical Research Data: A Workshop,” concluded that giving other scientists access to information from studies was increasingly important for the research community. But the report did acknowledge that researchers sometimes have fears that the data they share, for example clinical results, might be misused or misinterpreted if not enough attention is given to how the data were originally collected.

“The biomedical industry lags behind the rest of the world in how we share information,” says Sharon Terry, chair of the IOM workshop committee and president of the Genetic Alliance, a Washington, DC-based health advocacy group that focuses on issues related to gene testing. “We need to catch up with the other industries that have figured out ways to share data and still protect it.”

In the new survey, a majority of researchers said that they would be willing to share study materials with their colleagues, according to the results presented by Christine Laine, the editor-in-chief of the Annals of Internal Medicine, at the International Congress on Peer Review and Biomedical Publication held in Chicago today.

The findings came from theoretical questions answered by 389 respondents who published papers in the Annals of Internal Medicine between 2008 and 2012. During that period, 71% said they would share their study protocols beyond what was in the methods, and 72% were willing to share the full statistical methods used to analyze the data, including the computer algorithms employed. However, only 54% were willing to share all the data collected during the study, including information that didn’t end up being in the final report. Most of the researchers who answered the survey questions also added extra provisos under which they would share these types of information; for example some would only do so in response to a personal request from an interested party (rather than depositing the information in, for example, an online data bank).

Downward trend

What concerns the surveyors most is that over the five-year survey period the responses showed a noticeable decline in scientists’ willingness to share details about their study protocols. Based on the replies to the theoretical questions, around 80% of the survey respondents in 2008 said they would share additional details about their study protocols, beyond what is described in the methods section of the paper, but by 2012 only 60% were willing to provide colleagues with that information, a significant difference. There was a similar—but not statistically significant—slip in researchers’ willingness to share data. When the survey started, about 60% of researchers said they’d share raw data, but five years later that number had dropped to 45%.

Continue reading