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Treacherous Antibodies Promote Dengue
Infection
A long-standing
mystery surrounding the rising scourge of dengue fever
why it is much more dangerous to catch it for a second time
has been resolved by scientists.
Dengue fever is a potentially fatal, mosquito-borne
disease whose incidence has been on the rise, threatening
two-thirds of the world's population mainly in the tropics
and sub-tropics, according to the WHO.
The risk of developing a life-threatening
complication dengue haemorrhagic fever is higher
during a second infection, a problem that has complicated
efforts to develop a vaccine. But the reason for this has
evaded explanation so far.
Now, scientists working to unravel this
mystery have found that certain antibodies produced by the
immune system to fight the dengue virus do not protect against
a repeated infection. Instead they help the virus to infect
the body, causing severe health problems, scientists report.
The finding could help develop an effective
and safe vaccine as it provides "some key information
about what is and what is not likely to work when trying to
combat the dengue virus," said researchers in the United
Kingdom and Thailand, who published their results in Science
(7 May).
After analysing blood samples donated
by infected volunteers, the researchers identified antibodies
that their immune systems had made against the dengue virus.
The body normally produces antibodies that attack viruses
but these precursor membrane protein (prM) antibodies unexpectedly
boosted replication of the dengue virus during a second infection.
The antibodies recognise different strains
of virus, but are not specific enough to prevent infection,
and in fact help the virus enter the host cells where it replicates
and causes further infection.
So far there is no vaccine against dengue
fever but several candidates are in clinical trials (see Study
reviews dengue vaccine candidates).
Since most of the vaccines elicit the
response of these prM antibodies, there are now concerns that
vaccines might predispose people to develop dengue haemorrhagic
fever.
"Most of the leading vaccine candidates
contain sequences for both the dengue prM and envelope [the
protein cover of many viruses]," Gavin Screaton, chair
of medicine at Imperial College London, UK, and co-author
of the study, told SciDev.Net.
"The prM antibodies can be harmful,
so an ideal vaccine would attempt to minimise these while
still stimulating antibodies against the envelope, which is
likely to be the most protective," he added.
Sarah Rowland-Jones, an immunologist at
the Weatherall Institute of Molecular Medicine, University
of Oxford, UK, described the study as "exciting".
"This is a very important finding
which helps resolve the controversy about why severe cases
are much more likely to occur when people have been infected
previously with a different dengue virus strain, and will
provide a clear indication of the kind of immune response
that should be avoided in dengue virus vaccines," she
told SciDev.Net.
Source: SciDev net
Date: May 18, 2010

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