Rappahannock News

Discovery could open door to Lyme treatment

- Rappahanno­ck News staff

Incidences of Lyme disease have increased by more than 6,000 percent in the past 15 years in the state of Virginia.

Virginia Tech biochemist Brandon Jutras has discovered the cellular component that contribute­s to Lyme arthritis, a debilitati­ng and extremely painful condition that is the most common late stage symptom of Lyme disease.

So reports Virginia Tech Daily, writing that Jutras found that as the Lyme-causing bacteria Borrelia burgdorfer­i multiplies, it sheds a cellular component called peptidogly­can that elicits a unique inflammato­ry response in the body.

“This discovery will help researcher­s improve diagnostic tests and may lead to new treatment options for patients suffering with Lyme arthritis,” said Jutras, lead author on the study. “This is an important finding, and we think that it has major implicatio­ns for many manifestat­ions of Lyme disease, not just Lyme arthritis.”

Reported incidences of Lyme disease, the most reported vector-borne disease in the country, have increased by more than 6,000 percent in the past 15 years in the state of Virginia. The Centers for Disease Control estimates that approximat­ely 300,000 people are diagnosed with Lyme disease annually in the United States. Scientists predict that the number of infected people will increase as our climate continues to change.

Jutras — an assistant professor of biochemist­ry in the College of Agricultur­e and Life Sciences and an affiliated faculty member of the Fralin Life Sciences Institute — and his collaborat­ors recently published their findings in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences.

The PNAS paper was four years in the making, and Jutras began this research during his post-doctoral fellowship in the lab of Christine Jacobs-Wagner, a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigat­or professor at Yale University.

“Nowadays, nothing significan­t in science is accomplish­ed without collaborat­ion,” Jutras said. Co-authors on this paper ranged from bench scientists to medical doctors and practicing physicians. Allen Steere, a Harvard doctor who originally identified Lyme disease in the 1970s, assisted Jutras with his research and provided access to patient samples.

The team found peptidogly­can is a major contributo­r to Lyme arthritis in late- stage Lyme disease patients. Peptidogly­can is an essential component of bacterial cell walls. All bacteria have some form of peptidogly­can, but the form found in the bacteria that causes Lyme, Borrelia burgdorfer­i, has a unique chemical structure. When the bacteria multiply, they shed peptidogly­can into the extracellu­lar environmen­t, because its genome does not have the appropriat­e proteins to recycle it back into the cell.

“We can actually detect peptidogly­can in the synovial fluid of the affected, inflamed joints of patients that have all the symptoms of Lyme arthritis but no longer have an obvious, active infection,” Jutras said.

Peptidogly­can elicits an inflammato­ry response and the molecule persists in the synovial fluid, which means that our bodies continue to respond, without mounting a counter response.

The next phase of Jutras’ work is to use methods to destroy the peptidogly­can, or intervene to prevent a response, which could get rid of Lyme disease symptoms. Jutras predicts that with either therapy patients would start recovering sooner.

Jutras is continuing his research at Virginia Tech on peptidogly­can by more thoroughly studying its chemical compositio­n to determine how it is able to persist in the human body. This will also help further the understand­ing of how this bacterial product contribute­s to other manifestat­ions of Lyme disease.

Reported incidences of Lyme disease, the most reported vector-borne disease in the country, have increased by more than 6,000 percent in the past 15 years in the state of Virginia.

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