Harnessing Power of Immune System May Lessen Reliance on Antibiotics for Infections Like TB
Published:19 Apr.2023    Source:The Francis Crick Institute

If this natural process can be harnessed with new treatments, it could present an alternative to, or improve use of antibiotics, especially where bacteria have become resistant to existing drugs.

 
In their study, published in Nature Microbiology today, ahead of World TB Day on the 24th March, the team studied genes key to bacteria's ability to evade autophagy, a pathway that cells use to destroy themselves when they are under stress or infected.
 
They engineered human immune cells called macrophages from specialist stem cells called induced pluripotent stem cells, which have the ability to become any cell type in the body. They then used genome editing tools to manipulate the macrophages ability to perform autophagy. When genes key to autophagy were removed and the cells were infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (bacilli that cause TB), the bacterial infection took hold, replicating more within the engineered cells and causing mass host cell death.
 
These results are evidence for a strong role of autophagy in controlling intracellular infections like TB. If this pathway can be boosted or strengthened, it could be a new avenue for tackling antibiotic resistance, by making existing antibiotic drugs more effective or presenting an alternative to drugs in cases where bacteria have evolved resistance.
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