4/02/2012

Scientists find gene that can make flu a killer


LONDON (Reuters) - A genetic discovery could help explain why flu makes some people seriously ill or kills them, while others seem able to bat it away with little more than a few aches, coughs and sneezes.
In a study published in the journal Nature on Sunday, British and American researchers said they had found for the first time a human gene that influences how people respond to flu infections, making some people more susceptible than others.
The finding helps explain why during the 2009/2010 pandemic caused by a novel strain of the H1N1 flu virus , the vast majority of people infected had only mild symptoms, while others -- many of them healthy young adults -- got seriously ill and died.
In future, the genetic discovery could help doctors screen patients to identify those more likely to be brought down by flu, allowing them to be selected for priority vaccination or preventative treatment during outbreaks, the researchers said.
It could also help develop new vaccines or medicines against potentially more dangerous viruses, such as bird flu.
Paul Kellam of Britain's Sanger Institute, who co-led the study and presented the findings in a telephone briefing, said the gene, called ITFITM3, appeared to be a "crucial first line of defense" against flu.
When the IFITM3 protein encoded by that gene was present in cells in large quantities, the spread of the virus in the lungs was hindered, he explained. But when IFITM3 levels were lower, the virus could replicate and spread more easily, causing more severe symptoms.
People who carried a particular variant of the gene were far more likely to be taken into hospital when they got flu than people who carried other variants, he added.
"Our research is important for people who have this variant as we predict their immune defenses could be weakened to some virus infections," Kellam said.
"Ultimately as we learn more about the genetics of susceptibility to viruses, then people can take informed precautions, such as vaccination to prevent infection."
MICE EXPERIMENTS HELPED MAKE BREAKTHROUGH
The potential antiviral role of the IFITM3 gene and its protein in humans was first suggested in studies conducted by Abraham Brass of the Ragon Institute and Gastrointestinal Unit of Massachusetts General Hospital in the United States, who found the gene's activity blocked the growth of flu and other viruses in cells.
Teams led by Brass and Kellam then took the work further by disabling the IFITM3 gene in mice. They found that once these animals contracted flu, they had far more severe symptoms than mice with the working IFITM3 gene.
In effect, they said, the loss of this single gene in mice can turn a mild case of influenza into a fatal infection.
The researchers then sequenced the IFITM3 genes of 53 patients who had been hospitalized with seasonal or pandemic flu and found that a higher number of them had a particular, less efficient variant of IFITM3 compared to the general patient population.
The researchers believe this variant gene results in cells making a shorter version of the protein or making less of it, leaving patients more vulnerable to flu when they get it.
"Our efforts suggest that individuals and populations with less IFITM3 activity may be at increased risk during a pandemic, and that IFITM3 could be vital for defending human populations against other viruses such as avian influenza," said Brass.

source:healthnews.com

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Grace A Comment!