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Thursday, July 14, 2005
Writer: Philip Lee Williams, 706/542-8501,
phil@franklin.uga.edu
Contact: Rick Tarleton, *706/542-3362, tarleton@uga.edu
RESEARCHERS AT UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA PROVIDE FIRST LOOK AT
PROTEIN EXPRESSION IN CHAGAS DISEASE-CAUSING PARASITE
Athens, Ga. – Nearly 20 million people worldwide are infected
with a
parasitic ailment called Chagas Disease, and nearly a third of those
will develop severe heart trouble. Although options for treatment
are
poor and there are no vaccines, a new study by scientists at the
University of Georgia of proteins in the parasite that causes the
disease may offer hope.
The first-ever global survey of protein expression in the four lifecycle
stages of Trypanosoma cruzi, the parasite that causes the disease,
could help lead to vaccine discovery and new drug targets, according
to
Rick Tarleton, a cellular biologist in UGA’s Center for Tropical
and
Emerging Global Diseases (CTEGD) and lead researcher.
“This work provides a first view into some of the complex biology
of
this organism,” said Tarleton. “It helps tell us which
of its genes are
expressed as proteins and in what stages.”
The research was published today in the journal /Science/. The study
was
conducted by Tarleton with colleagues James Atwood and Brent Weatherly,
also of the CTEGD; Ron Orlando and his laboratory at UGA’s Complex
Carbohydrate Research Center; and with help from Fred Opperdoes of
Catholic University in Brussels.
The paper is part of a large section on parasite genomes in the current
issue of Science. Tarleton is coauthor of the paper on the T. cruzi
genome.
Chagas Disease is a pervasive problem in tropical climates. The disorder
is named after Brazilian doctor Carlos Chagas who first discovered
the
parasite that causes the disease in 1910. While T. cruzi is also
found
in many other animals, including cats, dogs and rodents, it is unlikely
that the parasite in those animals can be transmitted directly to
humans. The disease in people is transmitted by insects that bite
humans
then defecate, passing the parasite into the blood stream when victims
scratch the wound site or touch it and then touch a vulnerable mucus
membrane site, such as the eyes.
Despite the widespread nature of the disease, available treatments
are
unreliable, and no vaccine against the parasite has ever been developed.
That’s why Tarleton and his colleagues studied the T. cruzi“proteome”– proteins
it expresses. The issue is complex, since the parasite has
four lifecycle stages.
The research confirmed some of the predictions of gene expression
in the
just-completed gene map of T. cruzi. It also showed, for the first
time, which genes express proteins in the four development stages.
“This provides a wealth of interesting biology we didn’t
know before,
but it also gives us ways to put the information to use,” said
Tarleton. “What we found on stage specificity and abundance of protein expression
provides new criteria for selecting vaccine targets. Additional
information on the expression of large gene families may influence
decisions on their utility as vaccine candidates.”
While the proteome analysis, in conjunction with the genome, provides
new avenues for drug and vaccine discovery, limitations remain. Unlike
the genome, which provides a comprehensive view of the entire organism,
the proteomes are partial and preliminary.
“Unfortunately, current technology doesn’t allow for
the easy detection
of very low abundance proteins,” said Tarleton. “Also,
it can look only
at relative expression of proteins in different stages.”
Still, understanding how proteins work in T. cruzi is an important
first step toward helping end the misery that plagues so many people.
Researchers estimate that around 90 million people are at risk for
Chagas Disease. In endemic areas, it is associated with other parasitic
diseases, tuberculosis, HIV and malnutrition as a typical “social
disease” among the rural poor.
Blood transfusions tainted with T. cruzi are also a serious problem
in
South America, and costs associated with control and treatment run
into
the billions of dollars each year. While the disease is rare in the
United States, conditions in the far southeastern and southwestern
parts
of the country make it as least potentially susceptible to the disorder.
*Note to editors:* Tarleton is appearing on July 14 at a press
conference in London to announce the findings in the parasite genome
issue of Science. The easiest way to contact him for the next few
days
may be through e-mail.
A photo is available at
http://www.ugaphoto.alumni.uga.edu/news/19644-008.jpg.
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