Fats trigger immune defence
Synchrotron light delivers
Nature
paper for young scientist
Embargo and media briefing, 10 am Tuesday 14 August,
Melbourne Museum
Natalie Borg and colleagues from
Monash and Melbourne universities have shown for the first time how the body’s
immune defence system can be triggered by fats, sugars and other biological
compounds, not just by proteins. The research, published recently in Nature,
opens the way to potential new treatments for whole areas of disease such as
infections, rheumatoid arthritis, juvenile-onset diabetes and some types of
cancer.
The research team used a synchrotron
in Chicago to generate the first images of surveillance cells of the immune
system, natural killer T-cells (NKT-cells), interacting with protein molecules
which had captured a fat-based compound similar to those found on the coats of
infectious micro-organisms.
Such compounds, which are not normally
found in the body, trigger these natural killer T-cell to release chemical
messengers which alert the body’s immune system.
The work is considered of such
importance that Nature—one of the world’s most prestigious scientific
journals—not only published it, but also commissioned a commentary on its
significance.
“Until now we had a firm grasp on how
our immune system recognises protein markers of infection from viruses or
bacteria, but we had a limited understanding of how foreign fats and other
compounds are recognised,” says Borg. “Now we know that mode of recognition is
quite different as compared to proteins.
“By understanding how these killer
T-cells signal that the body is under attack, we can learn to manipulate the
system to give us a desired immune response to help combat a particular disease.
Indeed, the compounds which trigger the immune response could be used to
manipulate the system. The compound we used in our study has potent anti-cancer
activity in mice and comes from a marine sponge”.
Natalie Borg’s work is sponsored by an NHMRC Peter
Doherty Fellowship.
Natalie Borg is one of 16 early-career
scientists presenting their research to the public for the first time thanks to
Fresh Science, a national program sponsored by the Federal and Victorian
Governments.
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Natalie Borg at the X-ray detector at
the protein crystallography unit, Monash University. |
| Click on image for high
res. |
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