Futurity

These organs step up when virus enters via skin

After the site of infection and lymph nodes, there's a third checkpoint for invading viruses: blood-filtering organs.

New information about how and where the innate immune system fights off viral infections that enter through the skin could lead to better treatments for viruses like Zika, dengue, and measles.

The innate immune system is the body’s first line of defense, providing broad protection as opposed to the specific immune system, which targets the specific threat.

“This means even something as small as a pin prick in the skin still involves a response in your entire body.”

One role of the innate immune system is to quickly block the spread of infection. It was once believed that white blood cells, called macrophages, destroy viruses at the site of an infection, like a mosquito bite. Viruses that escape this checkpoint drain through lymph vessels to local lymph nodes, where it was assumed macrophages finished the job of the innate immune system before specialized adaptive immunity kicked in.

Researchers led by Christopher C. Norbury, professor of microbiology and immunology at the Penn State College of Medicine, recently found that some viruses get past the local lymph node, enter the blood, and are fought off at a third checkpoint: organs that filter the blood.

Working in mice, Norbury’s team used several methods to deplete different types of innate immune cells—collectively known as myeloid cells—at the three checkpoints before infecting the rodents with poxvirus. They found that depletion of macrophages in the liver and spleen had the biggest effect on allowing the virus to continue to spread through the body.

“If you have a deficit in immunity in those organs, it’s actually much worse than if you have a deficit in the local lymph node,” Norbury says. “This means even something as small as a pin prick in the skin still involves a response in your entire body.”

Among the strengths of the study: Instead of using just one method to deplete macrophages, the researchers used nine distinct methods to deplete different myeloid cells in various locations, allowing them to pinpoint the most important cell type and its primary location of action. The researchers used a technique that closely mimics natural infection.

Future studies could focus on boosting the response of liver and spleen macrophages in people with ongoing viral infections, Norbury says. The findings could also be used to identify populations that are at risk for particular infections.

“Future research should look at if susceptible people had profiles of biomarkers in blood that correlate with a lack of function of these cells,” Norbury says. “For instance, if you’ve got hepatitis B infection, then you’re going to have impaired macrophage function in the liver, which is going to impair the ability of those cells to go on and respond to other viruses.

“Going in and boosting those things—it’s not absolutely clear how you would do that right now. But the fact that we’ve identified that these cells are playing the systemic role means that maybe people will turn their attention to these cells now.”

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases funded this research, which appears in PLOS Pathogens.

Source: Abby Sajid for Penn State

The post These organs step up when virus enters via skin appeared first on Futurity.

More from Futurity

Futurity3 min read
Young Heavy Drinkers Cut Alcohol Use During Pandemic
A new study finds heavy-drinking young adults decreased alcohol intake during the pandemic. The researchers found alcohol use and alcohol-related problems substantially decreased in heavy-drinking young adults during the pandemic, and these decreases
Futurity4 min read
Alzheimer’s Moves Faster In People With Down Syndrome
A new study shows that Alzheimer’s disease both starts earlier and moves faster in people with Down syndrome, The finding may have important implications for the treatment and care of this vulnerable group of patients. Nearly all adults with Down syn
Futurity5 min read
Why Saber Tooth Cats Kept Their Baby Teeth
Analysis suggests the baby teeth of saber tooth cats stayed in place for years to stabilize the growing permanent saber tooth, perhaps allowing adolescents to learn how to hunt without breaking them. The fearsome, saber-like teeth of Smilodon fatalis

Related Books & Audiobooks