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Finding the missing regulatory links of the innate immune system

Publication Date: 
Wednesday, December 12, 2018 - 00:00

In a groundbreaking study published in Nature Genetics on 10 December 2018, a team of scientists from the University of Cape Town (UCT) and the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), led by Prof. Musa Mhlanga, has detailed – for the first time – the mechanism of how the immune system remembers prior exposures to, for example, pathogens (micro-organisms like bacteria, causing infection), to then trigger the right response to reinfection.

First author and CSIR senior researcher, Dr Stephanie Fanucchi, contextualises the research: “The immune system sits at the apex of our protection against all diseases, ranging from infectious diseases to chronic diseases, such as cancer and diabetes.”

Contact Person

David Mandaha

+12 841 3654/ 072 126 8910

dmandaha@csir.co.za

Nature Genetics publishes the findings of South African and international scientists on how immune genes are regulated

In a groundbreaking study published in Nature Genetics on 10 December 2018, a team of scientists from the University of Cape Town (UCT), the Institute for Infectious Disease and Molecular Medicine – based in UCT’s Faculty of Health Sciences –  and the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), led by Prof. Musa Mhlanga, has detailed – for the first time – the mechanism of how the immune system remembers prior exposures to, for example, pathogens (micro-organisms like bacteria, causing infection), to then trigger the right response to reinfection.

First author and CSIR senior researcher, Dr Stephanie Fanucchi, contextualises the research: “The immune system sits at the apex of our protection against all diseases, ranging from infectious diseases to chronic diseases, such as cancer and diabetes.”
Within the immune system reside two important actors; the innate and adaptive immune systems. The adaptive system is made up of lymphoid cells (T-cells and B-cells) which retain a memory of prior exposures to pathogens, infections and diseases. This memory can be ‘written’ to lymphoid cells by vaccines, for example, resulting in accelerated responses by the immune system to re-exposure to the infection or pathogen or even chronic diseases like cancer. The innate immune system is made up of myeloid cells (monocytes and macrophages) which historically have been thought to possess no such memory of prior exposures to pathogens, infections or disease.

In recent years, a phenomenon termed ‘trained immunity’ has been discovered and described by the laboratory of Prof. Mihai Netea in The Netherlands. Prof. Netea and others have observed that myeloid cells also retain a memory of prior exposures, though the mechanism was unknown. This memory appeared to be ‘written’ in chemical changes at the level of proteins associated with DNA encoding individual genes regulating the immune system in myeloid cells.

In this study, the scientists, with international collaborators from China, Germany, Italy, Singapore and the United States of America, have now unraveled and clarified the mechanism. Using the tools of genomics, bioinformatics, single-molecule imaging and gene editing, the authors demonstrated that another recently discovered group of biological molecules, called long non-coding RNAs (lncRNA), regulate the epigenetic acquisition of memory at immune genes that occurs during trained immune responses.

In their study, Mhlanga, from UCT/IDM, and colleagues characterise an example of one lncRNA called UMLILO, aptly named after the Zulu word for fire, which regulates how inflammatory genes retain a memory of prior exposures. These genes regulate inflammatory responses implicated in several major diseases including tuberculosis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, ischaemic heart disease, cystic fibrosis and autoimmune disease.

Fanucchi says, “This groundbreaking discovery of these lncRNAs can now be exploited therapeutically to discretely alter the immune response to treat a plethora of inflammatory-based diseases such as cancer and inflammatory bowel disease. Alternatively, this knowledge may be useful to boost the training of the immune system, to enable individuals with weakened immune systems to clear infections.”

Mhlanga adds, “Our study provides the first mechanistic explanation for how trained immunity works and exposes it to highly targeted intervention in immunomodulation, one of the largest therapeutic areas in the pharmaceutical industry. Broadly, it contributes to our fundamental understanding of immunology and gene regulation in general by indicating how gene expression can be influenced and maintain a persistent and heritable memory of environmental exposures. This memory can be ‘written’ and ‘erased’ continuously via environmental exposures over the lifetime of an individual.”

Second author Ezio Fok, a PhD student at UCT and the CSIR, who, under the supervision of Mhlanga, significantly contributed to the study, sees the very immediate practical result pertinent to South Africa from the study. “Recent studies have, for example, implicated trained immunity in the mechanism by which yellow fever vaccine and BCG (a tuberculosis vaccine) work. This indicates that measuring specific lncRNA levels may be a useful biomarker for assessing effective innate immune activation (for example, BCG-induced vaccination). This could be of major importance in public health today in assessing vaccine efficacy.”

The study is the product of numerous fruitful international collaborations, as well as the continued financial support from the South African Department of Science and Technology, the South African Medical Research Council and the CSIR.

“We are very grateful for the support for this kind of fundamental research in South Africa. Our goal is that scientists in Africa should not simply be consumers of fundamental scientific discoveries; rather they should be active contributors and producers to this body of basic scientific knowledge. We would like to train the next generation of scientists in Africa to become excellent scientists who routinely produce ground-breaking work,” concludes Mhlanga.        

The paper has been published online at https://www.nature.com/articles/s41588-018-0298-2            


Prof. Musa Mhlanga of UCT (left) and Ezio Fok of the CSIR,
who is doing his PhD under the supervision of Mhlanga.

            

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Issued by the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) and the University of Cape Town (UCT)

Enquiries:
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