The Real Cause Of Typhoid Fever Accidentally Discovered
Saturday, July 20, 2013 0:51
It’s often the case in science that things are discovered by accident.
Alexander Fleming uncovered the secrets of antibiotics with a – coupled
with an intelligent mind to recognize his good fortune. Now, it seems
that scientists at Yale University have lucked out, too: they’ve
discovered the real cause of typhoid fever.

Typhoid fever is a disease that dates back to before ancient Greece and
still causes as many as revealed the true cause of the disease.
“It’s the oldest recognizable disease, it devastated Athens and is
credited as the main reason why the Spartans beat the Athenians in war,”
said Jorge Galan, the study’s author.
It’s been known for some time that the bacterium responsible for the disease is Salmonella typhi,
but despite mankind’s long history with the microbe, “we’ve really been
blindsided as to why this bug is so pathogenic, even though it’s a
close cousin of the other salmonella sickness, food poisoning,” said
Galan.
One of the reasons why humankind has been ignorant to the workings of S. typhi is
because it’s a somewhat neglected disease without many researchers
working on it, said leading typhoid fever expert , from Aga Khan
University in Pakistan.
Galan’s research now discloses how S. typhi has
managed to retain its stealth for so long. Its deadliness comes from a
novel life strategy: it doesn’t release its toxin until it’s firmly
inside a mammalian host cell. Normally when microbiologists search for a
potential toxin produced by a microbe, they grow the organism in a
culture and then grind it up and search for a candidate compound within
the mixture. But S. typhi does
not produce a toxin unless you’ve allowed it to enter a host cell, so
you couldn’t possibly find it using conventional methods.
Galan, however, broke with protocol to look at the microbe after it had
infected a host cell. “We happened to be studying the interaction of [S. typhi] with human cells, we weren’t in the business of trying to find the typhoid toxin, we just bumped into this,” said Galan.
Once inside a mammalian host cell, the typhoid bacterium begins to
synthesize the toxin, which is then packaged into courier vessels to be
unleashed.
“The toxin is dumped outside of the cell where the bacterium resides and
it enters the blood system to hit its target,” said Galan.
Once Galan had identified what he thought could be the toxin responsible
for typhoid disease, he isolated and purified it. He then infected mice
with it and found that it did indeed result in typhoid symptoms in the
mice, except fever, which is an immune response to the presence of the
bacterium rather than the toxin itself.
“I think this is an absolutely fascinating paper, but it’s only the
first step in the right direction,” said Bhutta. “This particular study
looked at mutant strains [of S. typhi],
the next step is to work out how much of this is true in real life. How
much of this can be replicated by other researchers?”
Bhutta said that it’s still “too early to say whether this is a turning
point or not,” towards the possible eradication of the disease.
Galan on the other hand said it will be “scientifically trivial” to
synthesize an effective vaccine from an inactivated version of the toxin
he discovered – though he concedes that the practicalities of the
matter, such as finding enough funding, present a more formidable
challenge.
Currently, typhoid treatment relies on a course of antibiotics that
targets the bacteria rather than the toxin; occasionally even that
fails.
“There are many instances in which people receive antibiotics but they
still can’t pull out of the disease. Clearly the bacteria is no longer
there. They eventually die. Our hypothesis is that the toxins are still
circulating around,” said Galan.
Contacts and sources:
Benjamin Plackett, ISNS contributorInside Science News Service
Source: http://nanopatentsandinnovations.blogspot.com/2013/07/the-real-cause-of-typhoid-fever.html

No comments:
Post a Comment