Cystic Fibrosis: Two-Pronged Model Could Help Foil Tough Infections
Main Category: Cystic FibrosisAlso Included In: Infectious Diseases / Bacteria / Viruses
Article Date: 27 Apr 2009 - 1:00 PDT
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Dartmouth Medical School researchers have devised a novel approach for thwarting the relentless bacterial infections that thrive in the lungs of people with cystic fibrosis (CF), unlocking new possibilities against a tenacious and toxic hallmark of the common genetic disease.
Combining a mainstay antibiotic with drugs to deprive the bacteria of iron, which facilitates their persistent growth, appears to boost infection killing, they found.
Their research, reported in the American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology online and scheduled for publication, builds on the collaborative expertise of DMS microbiology and lung physiology labs studying cystic fibrosis infections.
Cystic fibrosis patients are plagued by infections of the bacteria Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Their mucous-clogged lungs are fertile incubators for the bacteria to breed and cluster in slimy communities called biofilms that become increasingly drug resistant and damaging. Tobramycin, the antibiotic routinely used against the microbes, can control, but not efficiently eliminate Pseudomonas established on CF airway cells.
Last year, the DMS researchers reported that it took far more tobramycin to destroy biofilm pockets than can be delivered to the lungs. Using a surrogate tissue culture system they created to simulate human airways, they determined that up to 10 times the maximum tobramycin dosage was needed. They were also studying iron overload in CF lungs. Airway cells with the CF gene mutation release more iron, and the bacteria depend on that iron to form their resilient biofilms, the investigators discovered.
Now, applying their findings to the clinical front, the team demonstrated that two agents already approved by the Federal Drug Administration to treat acute iron poisoning or overload can enhance the ability of tobramycin against Pseudomonas infection.
"The beauty is that we are mixing FDA-approved drugs-- antibiotics and iron chelators-- to potentiate the effect of tobramycin on biofilm formation," said lead author Dr. Sophie Moreau-Marquis, a research associate. "It's an exciting translational framework that opens the door to potentially treating CF patients, taking the novel model we developed from the lab hopefully to the clinic."
Co-authors of the study are DMS professors Dr. Bruce Stanton of physiology, who heads the laboratory where Moreau-Marquis works, and Dr. George O'Toole of microbiology and immunology.
The research combines two results: "We were first to show iron is definitive for biofilms forming on live human airway cells. And the highest concentration of tobramycin that can reach CF lungs is below what we've shown to be barely enough to eradicate biofilms on airway cells," Moreau-Marquis said.
The team used two FDA-approved iron chelators, deferoxamine and deferasirox, that can remove excess iron from the system by binding to the metal in a process called chelation. To mimic the clinical environment, they stuck to the maximum possible tobramycin dose of 1,000 micrograms per milliliter, mixed with a chelator.
The combination had a dramatic effect: it disrupted the mass of established and highly resistant bacteria in human airway cells by 90 percent and it also prevented formation of damaging biofilms. In contrast, neither an iron chelator nor tobramycin alone had such success.
"We built on the idea that if more iron helps bacteria to grow, maybe taking iron away will help kill them," said O'Toole. "The concept is to reformulate one of these iron chelators to be inhaled with tobramycin, which is already inhalable, to treat the bacteria locally in the lungs."
Still, the team found evidence that a chelator can get into lungs from the bloodstream. Using a permeable support in the lab, they mimicked giving tobramycin to the lung side and a chelator to the blood side and showed that the iron chelator is able to work its way through to lungs.
The researchers are working with the CF clinic at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center to develop clinical trials. Their study is part of Dartmouth's interdisciplinary Lung Biology and Cystic Fibrosis Research Development programs, and is supported by the National Institutes of Health and the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation.
Source:
Sue Knapp
Dartmouth College
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Cystic Fibrosis
posted by Dan Abshear on 27 Apr 2009 at 4:58 amWith cystic fibrosis and infections:
Cystic fibrosis (CF) is known as what is called an autosomal recessive genetic disorder, which means the disorder is present in such people because they lack an essential chromosome, which is what delivers DNA.
With cystic fibrosis, each of your parents contributed to you what are known as CFTR protein genes that were mutated, meaning the genes are defective, which is why one acquires CF.
The disease was first recognized during the 1930s. The name of the disease is derived from the frequent scarring of the pancreas associated with CF. CF has also been called Anderson’s Syndrome in the past.
It is the most common hereditary disease in the United States. Also, the disease is almost entirely present in those who are ethnic white people and those of European decent. About 30,000 people in the U.S. have Cystic Fibrosis. Also, and for reasons unknown, men live longer than women with CF. This is disease is rare, yet devastating for one who may have it.
This is a multi-system disease that can be deadly, and most with CF never lived past 5 years of age until the 1950s. Today, about 40 percent of cystic fibrosis patients are adults. With proper dietary supplements, and antibiotics to treat lung infections, the lifespan of CF patients continues to increase.
Normally, CF is diagnosed when one is an infant- based on such things as low birth weight. Malnutrition is common due to the disease preventing the body from absorbing nutrients, and certain vitamins, such as vitamin D,E,A, or K. About 85 percent OF CF patients are deficient with such vitamins. In addition, genetic screening is now done on all neonates for up to 29 genetic disorders in most states in the U.S.
Aside from the CF patient experiencing often pancreatic fibrosis, CF also causes lung infections and digestive problems as well. With cystic fibrosis, the glands in your exocrine system, glands that normally produce thin and slippery fluids for your internal organs instead produce thick mucus that essentially clogs your organs, such as your pancreas (mucovisidosis).
This thick mucus also contributes to lung dysfunctions and infections as well.
There are pharmaceuticals that have yet to be approved designed to treat cystic fibrosis patients, which appear to be promising for those affected by this disease, and improving their lifestyle, if not their lifespan..
The CF patient may want to consider seeking out those doctors and hospitals who are specialists with cystic fibrosis for evaluative reasons and treatment reviews that will be best for them to address the complications of cystic fibrosis.
Dan Abshear
info lung scarring
posted by Jseph Benoit on 17 Oct 2010 at 12:17 amI appreciate the research cause i just got dignosed of scar in the lung
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