Posts Tagged ‘Immune System’

How bacteria boost the immune system

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010

Earlier studies had shown that mice raised in germ-free environments have poorly developed immune systems, but no mechanism had been revealed by which bacteria help to develop and maintain the immune system, until now.

In ground-breaking research, molecules on the surface of bacterial spores have been observed binding to molecules on the surfaces of B lymphocytes – key components of the immune system that produce antibodies which fight harmful viruses and bacteria. This union then resulted in the B cells dividing and multiplying.

This discovery could potentially lead to the use of bacterial spores to treat people with weak or undeveloped immune systems, and perhaps even to fight cancers.

Worms and bugs cooperate to enhance their host’s immune system

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

Evidence from Manchester University suggests that we may need both bacteria and worms in our gut for an optimally healthy immune system, and that the relationship between worms, bugs and their host is like a three legged stool: remove one leg and the whole thing collapses.

Researchers studying the parasitic nematode Trichuris muris in mice have concluded that gut parasites have an essential role to play in developing immunity, as part of a complex and subtle interaction that has developed between helminths, intestinal bacteria and their hosts to provide an efficient and beneficial ecosystem for all concerned.

For further comment on this research, see: New gut ecosystem model?

Appendix: backup bug bank

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

When my appendix was removed, many years ago, I was assured by my doctor that it was just a useless vestige – all that remains, according to Darwin, of a much larger organ, the caecum.

However, recent observations and experiments have disproved Darwin’s theory, and suggest that the appendix may have a use after all – as a ’safe house’ where beneficial commensal bacteria can ride out bouts of diarrhoea, before emerging to repopulate the gut.

The internal walls of the intestine are coated by biofilm, a thin, delicate layer consisting of microbes, mucous and immune system molecules, the role of which is thought to be the protection of good bacteria. These biofilms extend into the appendix, where they are even more pronounced.

The location and position of the appendix are such that, even if diarrhoea is severe enough to flush away the entire contents of the bowels, including its biofilms, the beneficial bacteria within the appendix are likely to remain intact, and able to repopulate the lining of the intestine before more harmful bacteria can take over.

The appendix also has other benefits, such as the manufacture of white blood cells, antibodies and associated chemicals, and it’s presence reduces the risk of developing Crohn’s disease. Furthermore, it can, if necessary, be used in reconstructive surgery, to provide a substitute ureter, for example, or an effective sphincter for a reconstructed bladder. So this seemingly insignificant appendage is not something to be cast aside lightly.

The problem with the appendix is that it is prone to inflammation (appendicitis) which hospitalises 320,000 and kills up to 400 Americans each year. This inflammation has, since Darwin’s time, been thought to be due to a defect in the appendix, such as obstruction of its opening. However, it now appears that Darwin was probably also wrong about this, and it is much more likely that the appendix has fallen foul of the effects of the cultural changes and improved sanitation that are associated with industrialisation and which have left the human immune system with far fewer legitimate targets, thus exposing our own tissues, including the appendix, to its marauding agents.

The author of the first-ever historical study of the appendix suggests that, now that we have a better understanding of the function of the appendix and the effects on it of modern lifestyles, we should be looking for ways to challenge our immune system in much the same manner that it was challenged back in the Stone Age. He of course anticipates that this will eventually be achieved by the use of synthetic medicines, and is seemingly unaware that the immune system can already be effectively challenged by reintroducing some of the organisms that were, for millennia, the natural quarry of the immune system - ‘old friends’, such as helminths.

By reinstating a few benign intestinal worms (available from Autoimmune Therapies), we can introduce an effective mechanism for controlling inflammation throughout the body and thereby not only reduce the liklihood of our appendix becoming inflamed and needing to be removed, but also ensure that we will continue to benefit from the valuable functions that we now know are performed by this odd little organ.

‘Friendly’ bacteria: side-lined healers

Saturday, October 24th, 2009

Of the 100 trillion ‘friendly’ bacteria, from hundreds of different species, that we each carry around in our gut, only a few may have a special role in shaping our immune responses, but one of this select group involved in immune regulation may have been found recently, in the form of a little-known bacterial species called segmented filamentous bacterium.

This ‘master’ bacterium is the first example to be found of a commensal bacterium that can simultaneously orchestrate a large spectrum of intestinal immune responses – both innate and adaptive, pro-inflammatory and regulatory – to create an immune barrier in the gut.

It can single-handedly initiate immune cell responses in mice that normally require the concerted efforts of the entire mouse microbiota and, by so doing, effectively protect mice from illness caused by an intestinal pathogen.

There is also now further evidence of the ability of ‘friendly’ gut bacteria to not only help fight infection, but also do so while maintaining a fine balance between over- and under-stimulating the immune system.

Research is also ongoing into the development of modified probiotics that can divert gut pathogens away from vulnerable intestinal cells. By adding to harmless gut bacteria molecular mimics of the sugar receptors displayed on the walls of intestinal cells, the researchers have succeeded in duping the infamous E. coli O157 pathogen into attaching to the bacteria rather than the cells, to provide 100% protection against this otherwise fatal disease.

Recent evidence to support the therapeutic use of simpler, unmodified probiotics includes Dutch research which found that treating pregnant mothers, and then their infants, with particular strains of probiotics may help prevent eczema in children with a family history of allergies.

Research conducted in China has also recently found that probiotic dietary supplementation during the winter months was a safe and effective prophylaxis against colds and influenza in children, reducing fever, rhinorrhoea and cough incidence, as well as the need for antibiotics and the number of missed school days attributable to illness. When children in the study who were taking probiotics did get fevers, coughs or runny noses, they recovered significantly faster than untreated peers.

While the Lactobacillus acidophilus and Bifidobacterium animalis strains used in this latter study were both independently effective, the best results were obtained when the two types of bacterium were combined, hinting at the possibility that the use of multiple species of organism may be preferable in the case of bacterial therapy, as it appears to be in helminthic therapy.

All this recent work adds to a substantial body of existing evidence for the therapeutic effects of probiotics, just some of which is mentioned below.

Probiotics can help fight the stomach bug Helocobacter pylori, benefit the sickest young children on antibiotics, ease antibiotic diarrhoea, and may help reduce salmonella infection.

Probiotics have been shown to be active against inflammation in models of arthritis and salmonella infection, to ease colic in breastfed babies, normalise bowel frequency in IBS patients, improve health in patients with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, help reduce obesity, ease ulcerative colitis, and promote oral health.

Ultimately, it may be the case that many of the ills to which our own species falls prey could be amenable to the ministrations of commensal bacteria, and with less side effects than are associated with the isolated synthetic molecules which are the mainstay of medicine today.

Yet, however attractive this idea may be to those who are ill, and however encouraging the results above, the reality is that the latter constitute only a trickle when compared with the veritable torrent of research being conducted into patentable synthetic pharmaceuticals.

Currently, medicine appears to be rather less interested in pursuing probiotic research than is the food industry, for whom functional foods – including dairy products containing probiotics – are their fastest-growing product group.

Unfortunately, the dominance of the profit motive in medical research leaves little appetite for exploration of the lost world within us, so, at the present rate of progress, it could be many decades before we understand our own microbiome sufficiently to fully capitalize on the therapeutic potential of the organisms within it.

An approach which obviates the need to identify individual beneficial bacterial species is faecal bacteriotherapy, which employs the most complete mix of human-derived probiotic bacteria possible – the entire faecal flora of a healthy human being. Already shown to be successful against ulcerative colitis, this treatment should arguably be subject to further formal trials for this and other diseases.

This approach has been around for a number of years, but has failed to capture the attention of clinicians, perhaps due to the nature of the protocol (detailed here) which some may find repugnant. This is a great pity because the therapy is low-tech, low-cost, minimally invasive, and offers perhaps the ultimate bacterial probiotic.

Whilst we are forced to rely on manufacturers to provide us with probiotics in supplement form – which usually contain only one or two strains of a very limited number of bacterial species, and are invariably expensive – the all-in-one probiotic delivered by faecal bacteriotherapy is available free, and acquiring it is within the capability of any moderately adventurous and resourceful individual. Given a willing, healthy donor and some basic equipment, this procedure is ripe for self-administration, using the rectal delivery route. Anyone who can perform colonic irrigation, should be able to manage this.

This option is therefore something which those with ulcerative colitis may wish to consider, although helminthic therapy using whipworms remains the first choice for this condition, as there is already much preliminary scientific evidence supporting its use. It is also convenient and has produced excellent results in those who have tried it thus far.

Tiny worms turn the tide on food allergy/intolerance

Tuesday, September 8th, 2009

After having been unable to eat normal food for the last twenty five years, I am now once again able to enjoy the delights of a number of different foods, and this is entirely thanks to a few tiny hookworm now residing in my gut.

Most people with allergies who host hookworm find that their symptoms begin to abate between 11 and 13 weeks after their inoculation with hookworm larvae, so I waited until 12 weeks before trying a few normal foods again, and found, to my delight, that I could tolerate several of them without any difficulty.

After about six weeks of experimentation, I had found 20 foods, including proteins (white fish, goat’s milk products and eggs), starches (rice, potatoes, buckwheat and polenta), root vegetables (carrot, parsnip and sweet potato) and several fruits (apple, pear, peach and raspberries) that I could safely eat. After so many years on powdered semi-elemental formula, the humble spud tasted absolutely divine! And chocolate! Mmmmmmm! I really think I’m going to become addicted to this – again!

At 18 weeks post inoculation, I’m combining small amounts of normal foods with my medically prescribed formula feed and trying not to rush progress too quickly, and there are still days when my returning tolerance seems to waiver and my gut begins to get sore again, but it’s still early days, as hookworms take approximately six months to get into their stride.

There are also still days when I get diarrhoea, which is an inevitable consequence of acquiring 35 hookworm at the same time, and evidence of my body’s attempt to retake control of my immune system, which is now increasingly coming under the influence of my new little friends.

As my little gut buddies reestablish their ancient, symbiotic relationship with my body, these fluctuations will settle down. This process is not like taking a drug, which unilaterally imposes control on the body’s chemistry, but more a case of establishing a flexible, two-way relationship which eventually achieves an equilibrium that is mutually beneficial to both worms and host. And this process takes a while – usually about 11 months – so there is plenty of time yet for things to settle down and, hopefully, for further improvements to appear.

During these many years of having to watch others eat normally, while I could only have liquid semi-elemental infant feed, I never gave up hope that, one day, I would find a solution that would enable me to eat normally again. Helminthic Therapy, has proved to be that solution, and I’m just so pleased that, thanks to my little friends, I’m once again able to eat something with a real taste to it!

For a much more detailed account of this experiment, see: ‘Wriggling out of food intolerance and fatigue‘.

Type 1 diabetes linked to immune response to wheat

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

New research shows, for the first time, that carriers of certain genes may be more likely to develop an over-reaction in the gut to wheat, and possibly also to other foods, and that this may alter the balance of the immune system to favour the development of immune diseases such as type 1 diabetes.

The finding that nearly half of the subjects with type 1 diabetes had an abnormal immune response to wheat proteins adds to the notion that the gut is closely involved in the development of diabetes, and suggests that a wheat-free diet may reduce the risk of developing this disease.

Parasites shaped our immune system

Friday, August 21st, 2009

Parasites appear to have been responsible for making some of our immune proteins into the inflammatory defenders they are today but, equally, they have also sculpted some genes into risk factors for intestinal disorders.

Of 91 genes assessed in this study, 44 bore signatures of evolutionary selection, meaning that the genetic variation was due neither to chance nor to the migration of populations over time. And some of that variation correlated with the diversity of parasites that live alongside humans.

In general, parasitic worms appear to have had a more powerful influence on the development of our immune system than smaller microbes such as viruses, bacteria, and fungi, perhaps because of the slower evolution of worms.

More related research here…

Good bugs prevent colds and flu

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

According to a study done in China, children who were regularly given probiotic bacteria during the winter had fewer colds, needed fewer antibiotics, and missed fewer days of school. Those who did succumb to infection recovered more quickly if they were taking the probiotic, and the benefits were even more marked in the case of a group who received two types of bacteria – Lactobacillus acidophilus and Bifidobacterium animalis.

Research had previously shown that probiotics can benefit those who are already ill with various conditions, possibly by boosting the immune system’s response to invaders, but it was previously not clear whether beneficial bacteria were effective in preventing sickness.

AHFMR research

Friday, July 17th, 2009

AHFMR research

I recently came across an interesting series of reports on research being carried out at the Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research.

Eat your worms

Derek McKay and his group are working with tapeworms to try to understand how treatment with a parasite can block inflammation, with the ultimate aim of identifying molecules that could be used as drugs to treat IBD.

Interestingly, McKay suggests the possibility that, if IBD patients were given a helminth infection to deliberately trigger the interleukin-10 response, and these worms were then eradicated, the patients’ immune systems might ‘remember’ the infection, and respond to treatment with a worm antigen, if their IBD were to flare in the future.

Eat your bacteria

Karen Madsen, who is working on how intestinal bacteria influence the development and progression of IBD, has found that both adult and pediatric patients with ulcerative colitis experienced significantly increased remission rates when given probiotic supplements, although the treatment was not as effective in Crohn’s disease.

Turning off inflammation, rebooting the immune system

Paul Beck is looking at the possibility that, in IBD, there may be no switch to turn off inflammation, with the result that T cells continue to make the inflammation steadily worse. He considers it possible that, one day, stem-cell transplants might be used to restore the normal, pre-disease state by rebooting the immune system.

Challenging the idea of autoimmunity

Controversially, Andrew Mason is challenging the widely held belief that many gastrointestinal diseases are caused by the body turning against its own cells, and suggests that at least some of these diseases may actually be of viral origin. He has already identified a virus associated with primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC), an autoimmune disease which gradually destroys the bile ducts, resulting in scarring of liver tissue, but clinical trials using antiviral therapy to treat PBC have not been conclusive.

Return of the lost worms

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

Replacing lost worms to regain health

Helminthic therapy is an experimental approach to the treatment of asthma, allergies and inflammatory and autoimmune diseases, which involves the administration of controlled quantities of selected, benign intestinal parasites such as hookworm and whipworm.

The treatment developed out of understanding gained from scientific studies which showed that, while these illnesses have escalated in developed countries during the past 50-100 years, they remain much less common in parts of the world where intestinal parasites are still prevalent.

The aim of the treatment is to rebalance the host’s immune system by replacing one or more of the harmless organisms which have been lost in recent decades due to improved hygiene, sanitation and lifestyle changes.

The organisms used have become masters of the human immune system during millions of years of coexistence with man and are adept at regulating their host’s immune response. In fact, the codependent relationship between worm and man is so close that the human genome is now arguably incomplete without the genes contributed by these organisms.

Autoimmune & biotherapy news 2009/7/9

Thursday, July 9th, 2009

Narcolepsy confirmed as an autoimmune disorder

The long-held suspicion that narcolepsy is an autoimmune disease has been confirmed by a Stanford University School of Medicine scientist, raising the prospect that a worm infection may benefit those who have this condition.

Alzheimer’s disease may be triggered by inflammation

According to this research, inflammation may be the factor responsible for preventing the removal of amyloid beta protein – the substance scientists believe is responsible for Alzheimer’s disease – from the brain. The medical solution proposed to correct this inflammation is, not surprisingly, a drug, but if inflammation really is the culprit, then an infection with helminths might offer a drug-free solution.

This finding may also mean that those of us who are already hosting helminths may be able to look forward to a dementia-free old age as an additional bonus to the effects we already enjoy in terms of a reduction in symptoms from our respective autoimmune conditions.

The risk of developing autism is up to three times greater in children whose mothers have an autoimmune disease

New findings support the theory that autism is somehow associated with disturbances in the immune system.

This is an interesting development in view of the fact that children with autism have shown improvement in their condition when exposed to parasites.

Bees ‘milked’ for their anti-inflammatory venom

A New Zealand honey producer milks honeybees using electric milking machines (no, don’t check the date – it’s not 1 April!) to obtain venom which is then added to honey for sale to people with arthritis.

The article points to a lack of scientific evidence to support the claim that the ‘bee sting honey’ has any therapeutic effect, but there are people who swear by bee stings as a source of relief from their arthritis.

Maggots on trial

Clinicians at Cardiff University in Wales are teaming up with a commercial producer of larvae to assess whether maggots really can deliver their anecdotally renowned wound cleaning abilities.

The UK’s National Health Service spends 3-5% of its budget on wound healing, so the team hope that maggots may provide substantial savings by cutting the length of hospital stays and reducing the number of expensive dressings used.

However, the study team may have difficulty finding willing volunteers – as the team on the Nottingham Hookworms for Crohn’s trial did – due to the strong repulsion response which such creatures cause in many people.

When a few maggots were found on the floor of a UK hospital operating theatre this week, the incident generated national headlines.

and the story ran for several days, until the carcass of a chick was found in pipes above the theatre and removed.

Bugs as good as drugs

Researchers examining antimicrobial treatments for bacterial vaginosis concluded that intravaginal lactobacillus is as effective as oral metronidazole.

But medicine can’t take its eyes off the ‘chemical universe’

Small chance of interesting medical clinicians in natural treatments like bee venom, lactobacillus, or even tried-and-tested worms, when they have their eyes set on a projected 970 million chemicals suitable for study as lucrative new drugs!

Better sleep without drugs that may affect your worms

Researchers at the University of Virginia have developed a unique Internet-based intervention, based on well-established face-to-face cognitive behavioral therapy techniques, that has shown remarkable results in improving patients’ sleep.

Alternatively, a simple meditation technique can have a profoundly beneficial effect on sleep, as I have found myself, although this isn’t a quick fix. Regular practice will certainly deliver improved sleep quality, and provide many other health and performance benefits as well.

Teenager diagnoses own Crohn’s disease in science class

If you thought you could rely on your doctor’s diagnostic skills, this report may shatter your illusion.

A teenager, who had suffered pain, diarrhoea, vomiting and fever for eight years, but whose pathologist had insisted she didn’t have Crohn’s disease, found evidence herself confirming the diagnosis when she looked through a microscope at slides of her own intestinal tissue during a high school science class.