Brothers in arms
A joint venture from researchers from the Helmholtz-Centre for Infection Research (HZI) in Braunschweig, the Otto-von-Guericke-University in Magdeburg, and the Karolinska institute in Sweden have taken an in-depth look at the connection between flu infection and pneumonia. Their results, recently released in the scientific journal "PLoS One", have disproven a common theory about flu-like pneumonia. Some viral infections trigger a decrease of immune cells in the blood – a so-called "lymphopenia". The reasons behind it and whether this is the case with influenza are unknown. To investigate the latter, HZI researchers infected mice with flu viruses and measured the amount of immune cells in the animal's blood every day. Some days later, flu-infected mice received a dosage of pneumonia bacteria usually harmless for healthy mice. While the flu-infected mice did develop a superinfection & subsequently died, surprisingly, they were not suffering from lymphopenia. The healthy, non-flu-infected mice defeated the bacteria successfully and recovered.
To discover whether a lack of immune cells encourages an infection with pneumonia bacteria in general, an artificial drug-induced lymphopenia was established in the mice. Without infecting these lymphopenic mice with flu viruses, they received pneumonia bacteria. Despite a severe lack of immune cells, the mice recovered completely.
With these results, the researchers could show that influenza facilitates and intensifies an infection from pneumonia bacteria, while disproving the common idea that this is caused by a lack of immune cells. "This result was an enormous surprise for us because it directly contradicts widespread assumptions", says Sabine Stegemann, researcher in the groups "Immune regulation" at the HZI and "Molecular Immunology" at the Otto-von-Guericke-University in Magdeburg.
"Now we want to understand the reasons for the increased susceptibility", says Matthias Gunzer, head of the group in Magdeburg. "It could be interplay of weakened mucous membranes and scavenger cells that induce ideal conditions for pneumonia bacteria to create a deadly lung infection. Another reason may be a reaction of the host immune system: It disables hyperactive flu-fighting immune cells to inhibit destruction of healthy lung tissue. "The immune system keeps itself under control and that makes it easy for pneumonia bacteria to infect the lung", says Gunzer.
Source: Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres
Related
- The immune response to influenza virus isn't 'all good'Tue, 2 Jun 2009, 9:57:10 EDT
- Bacterial pneumonia caused most deaths in 1918 influenza pandemicTue, 19 Aug 2008, 11:36:22 EDT
- No hiding place for infecting bacteriaSun, 15 Mar 2009, 20:49:27 EDT
- Men at increased risk of death from pneumonia compared to womenSun, 18 May 2008, 11:56:11 EDT
- Scientists learn why the flu may turn deadlyMon, 4 May 2009, 12:58:13 EDT
Other sources
- Brothers in armsfrom Science CentricFri, 20 Mar 2009, 9:14:24 EDT
- Influenza And Bacterial Pneumonia Make For Harmful Super-infectionfrom Science DailyThu, 19 Mar 2009, 19:29:00 EDT
- Brothers in armsfrom PhysorgTue, 17 Mar 2009, 14:08:20 EDT
- Brothers in armsfrom Science BlogTue, 17 Mar 2009, 12:11:36 EDT
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