Tag Archives: structural biology

Chloroquine

In a study published recently in the journal Science Signaling, Van Andel Research Institute (VARI) scientists demonstrate on the molecular level how the anti-malaria drug chloroquine represses inflammation, which may provide a blueprint for new strategies for treating inflammation and a multitude of autoimmune diseases such as arthritis, multiple sclerosis, and certain cancers.

Chloroquine is a widely used anti-malaria drug that inhibits the growth of parasites. For decades, chloroquine and its derivative amodiaquine have also been used as anti-inflammation drugs to treat diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis, though the exact mechanism of how chloroquine affects the immune system has remained unclear.

By providing an understanding of these basic functions, researchers may now have the necessary tools to develop improved treatments for a myriad of common autoimmune disorders.

“The implications of this study are significant,” said Henry F. McFarland, Ph.D., former Chief of the Neuroimmunology Branch of the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS). “These results provide a mechanistic basis for therapeutic strategies for treating inflammation and autoimmune diseases and should provide exciting new approaches which can be tested in clinical trials.”

Chloroquine

Chloroquine

Autoimmune diseases arise when the body’s immune system mistakes otherwise healthy cells, tissues, and organs for pathogens and attacks them. These diseases can afflict any part of the body, but one symptom common to most autoimmune diseases is that of inflammation.

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) lists more than 80 common autoimmune diseases including asthma, Crohn’s disease, Guillain-Barré syndrome, multiple sclerosis, myasthenia gravis, psoriasis, rheumatoid arthritis, and some types of cancers among many others.

Dr. H. Eric Xu, Head of the VARI Center for Structural Biology and Drug Discovery, and his colleagues showed that chloroquine represses inflammation through synergistic activation of glucocorticoid signaling. Glucocorticoids are a class of steroid hormones that bind to the glucocorticoid receptor present in almost every vertebrate animal cell. They are among the most potent and effective agents for treating inflammation and autoimmune diseases.


Synthetic glucocorticoids are used for treating asthma, allergies, and rheumatoid arthritis. Since glucocorticoids also interfere with some of the abnormal mechanisms in cancer cells, they are also used in high doses to treat certain cancers such as leukemia and lymphoma. However, at therapeutic dosages, glucocorticoids can cause a range of debilitating side effects including diabetes, osteoporosis, skin atrophy, and growth retardation.

“The discovery and development of novel uses of glucocorticoids that retain their beneficial therapeutic effects but reduce undesired adverse side effects remains a major medical challenge,” said VARI Research Scientist Yuanzheng He, Ph.D., lead author of the study.

The VARI research revealed an unexpected regulation of glucocorticoid signaling by lysosomal functioning. Lysosomes are organelles found in animal cells that use enzymes to break down waste materials and cellular debris.

Researchers found that they could mimic the effect of chloroquine by inhibiting lysosomes in the cell. They believe that the development of new therapies for treating inflammation and autoimmune disease will involve strategies that combine both glucocorticoid and lysosomal inhibitors.

“We have known for some time that both steroids and lysosomes affect the immune system, but we didn’t know that they worked together,” said VARI President and Research Director Jeffrey Trent, Ph.D. “Researchers now have a clear path forward for undertaking projects to develop glucocorticoid and lysosomal inhibitors, and to improve the efficacy and potency of chloroquine as a therapeutic agent.”

Universal flu vaccine

A universal flu vaccine, capable of working against all strains, would save lives and money by eliminating the need for the annual jab.

Researchers in California and the Netherlands believe they are now a “step closer” to meeting this objective.

By putting the new antibody together with one they discovered two years ago, they hope to make a vaccine that protects against the vast majority of strains.

It would not only stop people catching a virus, they say, but also neutralise it in those already infected – extremely useful in a situation like the swine flu pandemic of 2009.

The NHS spends about £100 million on vaccinating people against flu every year, so a one-off jab that provided good protection could save it a lot of money.

It would also save numerous lives: while official estimates put the annual death toll in the UK at about 500, many virologists think that is a gross underestimate.

Ian Wilson, professor of structural biology at the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, California, said a vaccine containing the two antibodies had “the potential to protect people against most influenza viruses”.

Both work by binding to small, unchanging sites on the “envelopes” that cover flu viruses.

These protective layers are studded with mushroom-shaped proteins that attract the attention of the body’s immune system.

flu vaccine

Flu vaccine

This leaves the virus to spread relatively unimpeded, to start with at least.

What makes flu viruses particularly tricky is that these proteins evolve rapidly, so a vaccine that works one year might be redundant the next.

However, scientists from Scripps and Crucell, a Dutch pharmaceutical company, have found that viruses also contain common elements which vary much less.

Antibodies that lock on to these “binding sites” – technically called epitopes – should therefore be able to work year in, year out.

Damian Ekiert, a graduate student at Scripps who has been working with Prof Wilson, explained: “The major goal of this research has been to find and attack relatively unvarying and functionally important structures on flu viruses.”

Two years ago the team identified the antibody CR6261, which in mice has been proven to work against about half of flu viruses, including those from the H1 family.

Such strains were responsible both for the Spanish flu of 1918-19, estimated to have killed up to 50 million people worldwide, and the recent swine flu pandemic.

Now they have found another antibody, CR8020, which appears to work against H3 and H7 strains.


Their work has been published in the journal Science Express.

Human trials of a vaccine based on the former are due to start soon; those on the latter are being planned.

Prof Wilson said that if they both worked separately they could be put into a combined vaccine that not only acted as a prophylactic but also a “fast-acting therapy” against epidemic or pandemic strains.

He said: “The ultimate goal is an active vaccine that elicits a robust, long-term antibody response against those vulnerable epitopes; but developing that is going to be a challenging task.”

Using antibodies is only one approach to developing a universal flu vaccine.

Other groups are looking at alternatives, such as “priming” the body’s immune system with a “base” of influenza DNA.