Researchers at NYU Langone Medical Center and elsewhere say that a
vaccination they have developed to fight a brain-based, wasting syndrome
among deer and other animals may hold promise on two additional fronts:
Protecting U.S. livestock from contracting the disease, and preventing
similar brain infections in humans.
The study, to be published in Vaccine online Dec. 21,
documents a scientific milestone: The first successful vaccination of
deer against chronic wasting disease (CWD), a fatal brain disorder
caused by unusual infectious proteins known as prions. Prions propagate
by converting otherwise healthy proteins into a disease state.
Equally important, the researchers say, this study may hold promise
against human diseases suspected to be caused by prion infections, such
as Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, kuru, familial insomnia, and variably
protease-sensitive prionopathy. Some studies also have associated
prion-like infections with Alzheimer's disease.
"Now that we have found that preventing prion infection is possible
in animals, it's likely feasible in humans as well," says senior study
investigator and neurologist Thomas Wisniewski, MD, a professor at NYU
Langone.
CWD afflicts as much as 100 percent of North America's captive deer
population, as well as large numbers of other cervids that populate the
plains and forests of the Northern Hemisphere, including wild deer, elk,
caribou and moose. There is growing concern among scientists that CWD
could possibly spread to livestock in the same regions, especially
cattle, a major life stream for the U.S. economy, in much the same
manner that bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or Mad Cow Disease,
another prion-based infection, spread through the United Kingdom almost
two decades ago.
According to Dr. Wisniewski and his research team, if further vaccine
experiments prove successful, a relatively small number of animals (as
few as 10 percent) could be inoculated to induce herd immunity, in which
disease transmission is essentially stopped in a much larger group.
For the study, five deer were given the vaccine; another six were
given a placebo. All of the deer were exposed to prion-infected brain
tissue; they also were housed together, engaging in group activities
similar to those in the wild. Scientists say this kept them in constant
exposure to the infectious prions. The animals receiving the vaccine
were given eight boosters over 11 months until key immune antibodies
were detectable in blood, saliva, and feces. The deer also were
monitored daily for signs of illness, and investigators performed
biopsies of the animals' tonsils and gut tissue every three months to
search for signs of CWD infection.
Within two years, all of the deer given the placebo developed CWD.
Four deer given the real vaccine took significantly longer to develop
infection -- and the fifth one continues to remain infection free.
Wisniewski and his team made the vaccine using Salmonella bacteria,
which easily enters the gut, to mirror the most common mode of natural
infection -- ingestion of prion-contaminated food or feces. To prepare
the vaccine, the team inserted a prion-like protein into the genome of
an attenuated, or no longer dangerous, Salmonella bacterium. This
engineered the Salmonella to induce an immune response in the gut,
producing anti-prion antibodies.
"Although our anti-prion vaccine experiments have so far been
successful on mice and deer, we predict that the method and concept
could become a widespread technique for not only preventing, but
potentially treating many prion diseases," says lead study investigator
Fernando Goni, PhD, an associate professor at NYU Langone.
No comments:
Post a Comment