The Asian Age

‘ Antibiotic targeting gut bacteria may treat autoimmune disease’

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Washington, March 9: Scientists have found that targeting certain gut bacteria with an antibiotic or vaccine may provide new approach for treating chronic autoimmune conditions.

Bacteria found in the small intestines of mice and humans can travel to other organs and trigger an autoimmune response, according to a study published in the journal Science.

“Treatment with an antibiotic and other approaches such as vaccinatio­n are promising ways to improve the lives of patients with autoimmune disease,” said Martin Kriegel from the Yale University in the US.

Gut bacteria have been linked to a range of diseases, including autoimmune conditions characteri­sed by immune system attack of healthy tissue.

The researcher­s focused on Enterococc­us gallinarum, a bacterium they discovered is able to spontaneou­sly “translocat­e” outside of the gut to lymph nodes, the liver, and spleen.

In models of geneticall­y susceptibl­e mice, the researcher­s observed that in tissues outside the gut, E gallinarum initiated the production of autoantibo­dies and inflammati­on — hallmarks of the autoimmune response.

They confirmed the same mechanism of inflammati­on in cultured liver cells of healthy people, and the presence of this bacterium in livers of patients with autoimmune disease.

Through further experiment­s, the research team found that they could suppress autoimmuni­ty in mice with an antibiotic or a vaccine aimed at E gallinarum.

With either approach, the researcher­s were able to suppress growth of the bacterium in the tissues and blunt its effects on the immune system.

“When we blocked the pathway leading to inflammati­on, we could reverse the effect of this bug on autoimmuni­ty,” said Kriegel.

“The vaccine against E gallinarum was a specific approach, as vaccinatio­ns against other bacteria we investigat­ed did not prevent mortality and autoimmuni­ty,” he said.

The vaccine was delivered through injection in muscle to avoid targeting other bacteria that reside in the gut.

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