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Human Herpes Virus 6B Is Associated With Mesial Temporal Lobe Epilepsy

May 31, 2007

There is strong evidence that one particular type of epilepsy is associated with a viral infection, according to new research. The international group of researchers, led by Steve Jacobson from National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, USA, found DNA from the virus, Human Herpes Virus 6B (HHV-6B) in specific regions of the brains in 11 of 16 patients with mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE) referred for investigation compared with zero of seven (0%) patients without MTLE.

MTLE is a common, severe, type of epilepsy that usually begins in childhood. Mesial temporal sclerosis is a change often seen in the brains of patients with this form of epilepsy. Temporal lobectomy is often used to control MTLE. HHV6 is usually acquired in early childhood - more than 90% of the general population can be shown to have been infected with the virus. After primary infection, HHV-6 can persist lifelong in some white blood cells, salivary glands, and in the central nervous system. Two HHV-6 variants are known, HHV-6A and HHV-6B. Active infection or reactivation of HHV-6 in the brain has been previously shown to be associated with neurological disorders, including epilepsy and encephalitis.

As well as showing the presence of viral DNA in patients with MTLE, in additional studies in one patient who had surgery over many months because of recurrent epilepsy, the researchers were able to detect an antigen (HHV-6 gp116/54/64), which is specific for HHV-6B, in astrocytes (primary brain cells). Finally, the authors showed that infection of cell cultures of astrocyes infected with HHV-6 showed a marked decrease in the expression of one protein, EAAT, which is known to be involved in transmitting glutamate across cell membranes; glutamate is a substance that acts to carry signals within the brain.

Overall, the researchers have now have detected HHV-6B in 15 of 24 patients with mesial temporal sclerosis or MTLE, in contrast to zero of 14 with other syndromes. If these findings are confirmed in other groups of patients with this form of epilepsy, it may open up new avenues of therapy.

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New theories on cause of Alzheimer’s

May 29, 2007

One-hundred-one years have passed since Alzheimer’s was first discovered by a German scientist, but we still don’t know what causes it. Is it a virus like herpes, a type of diabetes or something entirely different?

When Alzheimer’s starts, everything stops. Scientists still don’t know why the plaques and angles form but there are theories. Medical researchers have some new theories.

KING

Scientists are coming up with new theories on the cause of Alzheimer’s Disease.

Neuro-pathologist Suzanne de la Monte believes Alzheimer’s is actually a form of diabetes.

“We stumbled into the concept,” said Dr. Suzanne de la Monte, neuropathologist, Rhode Island Hospital. “It wasn’t like we were looking for it.”

The brain produces insulin just like the pancreas. In a brain with Alzheimer’s, insulin levels are much lower.

“They had a brain form of diabetes, they had insulin resistance, and they had a loss of insulin, and that’s why we dubbed the term Type 3 Diabetes,” said Warren Alpert, Medical School of Brown University.

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Researchers gave mice drugs to stop insulin from working. Within months, their brains were half the size and full of harmful plaques. The damage was reversed with drugs that improved insulin function, suggesting that diabetes therapies might also treat Alzheimer’s.

Neuro-scientist Howard Federoff is studying a different idea, that a gene known to predict Alzheimer’s is linked to the herpes virus.

“It could be conveyed by sharing a spoon or straw, by kissing,” said Dr. Howard Federoff, neuroscientist, Georgetown University.

If further research confirms the link, patients could be put on anti-viral medication or even be vaccinated for herpes and at the same time, prevent Alzheimer’s.

Lifestyle also matters. People in western countries have a much greater risk than those in India, where diets are higher in anti-oxidants. Researchers say fish, spices like curry and cumin, and certain juices may reduce the risk.

Other risk factors include being female, having high cholesterol or high blood pressure.

Contrary to earlier belief, the most recent research shows aluminum does not play a role in contributing to Alzheimer’s.

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Some herpes viruses may boost immune system

May 24, 2007

A case of mononucleosis now might save you from food poisoning later, according to new research from Washington University.

Scientists say that if the results from their research with mice hold true for humans, it could redefine what makes a healthy immune system.

Most healthy adults carry multiple herpes viruses, including one or both of those that cause mononucleosis.

The researchers, led by Dr. Herbert W. “Skip” Virgin, found that some of those viruses actually rev up the immune system, protecting against a food poisoning bacterium and a bacterium that causes the plague. Those findings suggest herpes viruses are crucial to a well-tuned immune system, he said.

Virgin said scientists who are developing vaccines against the mononucleosis viruses should consider whether wiping out such infections could have negative consequences.

His group also is trying to determine whether herpes could get the immune system too keyed up, causing autoimmune diseases, such as lupus or rheumatoid arthritis.

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Herpes viruses come in several varieties and can cause cold sores, chicken pox and genital herpes, as well as mononucleosis. Some of the viruses produce only a mild fever or no symptoms. Other people get very sick or die from the infections.

Herpes viruses remain in the body for a long time, hiding out in nerve cells. The viruses rouse periodically from their dormant state. When that happens, the body makes a hormone that sends out a red-alert against bacterial invaders. Immune cells called macrophages get the alarm and turn into bacteria-killers.

The researchers infected mice with either the Herpes simplex virus 1, which causes cold sores, or the mouse-equivalent of two herpes viruses that cause mononucleosis in people. Once the herpes viruses became dormant, the researchers gave the mice either a bacterium that causes plague, a bacterium that causes food poisoning or West Nile virus.

Mice that had been infected with either of the mono viruses were able to fight off the two bacteria, but not West Nile virus. Uninfected mice and mice infected with the cold sore virus were not protected from either bacteria or West Nile.

The study appeared last Thursday in the journal Nature

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Cold Sores - Coping With Herpes Simplex 1

May 21, 2007

If the lips are feeling itchy and there is a tingling sensation, then it could be due to cold sores. This is a disease that is caused by the herpes simplex virus or the HSV. When this virus affects a person, small rashes appear on the skin – when the rashes appear on the genitals, the condition is referred to as genital herpes, and when the rashes are on the face, it is the cold sore. Also known as fever blisters, these rashes are either red or purple in color, look swelled, and is usually seen on the outer edge of the mouth or the lip. But they are found on the nose as well. Since the sores appear on the visible part of the skin, they can look really ugly and thus create other problems. Coping with cold sores so becomes an important issue.

The situation becomes worse when the sores open up and a fluid like substance comes out of it. The blisters look much like the one’s that appears with chicken pox, and they can cause pain as well. But the intensity of pain can differ from one person to another.

As previously mentioned, cold sores are caused by the herpes simplex virus, a closely related but different variation of the version that causes genital herpes (simplex 2)And because of the fact that a virus cannot be ever completely removed from the human body (it remains inside the system dormant), the symptoms of cold sores can just be eradicated, and so, the disease tends to come back again and again in the form of blisters. So the only thing a person can do is try to fight the symptoms and send the virus to the dormant stage – thus coping with cold sores assumes great importance.

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Since the disease is caused by a virus, and because of the fact that a virus cannot be removed from the body ever, many tend to believe that a treatment is not at all needed. Lending credence to this belief is the fact that cold sores tend to go away themselves in time. So is treatment at all needed? The answer to this is ‘yes’.

Treatment will definitely remove the cold sores quicker. Also, cold sores can leave behind ugly looking scars in the face and this may look really bad. So why let this happen – after all, some great medicines that are based on natural ingredients are now available to quickly and efficiently remove the cold sores and bring back the old look again.

It can be tricky when the partner develops cold sores because the disease is extremely contagious. It can spread from kissing, drinking from the same glass, sharing the same towel, using a common towel or swimming pool and of course through sex. Well ideally it is better to avoid interacting with an affected person as much as possible – but that can become difficult.

So coping with cold sores becomes really important in such a case.

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Herpes virus may actually strengthen immune systems

May 21, 2007

ST. LOUIS — A case of mononucleosis now might save you from food poisoning later, according to new research from Washington University.
Scientists say that if the results from their research with mice hold true for humans, it could redefine what makes a healthy immune system.
Most healthy adults — an estimated 80 percent to 95 percent — carry multiple herpes viruses, including one or both of those that cause mononucleosis. The researchers, led by Dr. Herbert W. “Skip” Virgin, found that some of those viruses actually rev up the immune system, protecting against a food poisoning bacterium and a bacterium that causes the plague.
Those findings suggests that herpes viruses are a crucial part of a well-tuned immune system, he said. The study appeared Thursday in the journal Nature.
Virgin said scientists who are developing vaccines against the mononucleosis viruses should consider whether wiping out such infections could have negative consequences for the immune system. His group is now investigating how herpes viruses help protect against other infections.

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He also is trying to determine whether herpes could get the immune system too keyed up — causing autoimmune diseases, such as lupus, multiple sclerosis or rheumatoid arthritis.
Herpes viruses come in several varieties and can cause cold sores, chicken pox and genital herpes, as well as mononucleosis.
Some of the viruses produce only a mild fever or no symptoms. Other people get very sick or die from the infections.
“These are much more live-and-relate viruses than slash-and-burn viruses,” Virgin said.
Unlike flu or cold viruses, herpes viruses remain in the body for a long time, hiding out in nerve cells. The viruses rouse periodically from their dormant state.
When that happens, the body makes a hormone called interferon-gamma, which sends out a red-alert against bacterial invaders.
When the body’s first line of defense, immune cells called macrophages, get the alarm, they turn into ruthless bacteria-killers.

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Four area students among competitors at international science fair

May 16, 2007

Four area students are among 1,500 vying for tuition grants, internships, scientific field trips and a $50,000 college scholarship this week at the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair in Albuquerque, N.M.

Taylor Conrad, Scott Crawford, Maria Huang and Alexander Parmater will present individual research they conducted at LSU Health Sciences Center with help from mentor professors.

Conrad and Huang graduated from Caddo Magnet High School, Crawford from Airline High and Parmater from Benton High this month. None of them has participated in the Intel international fair before.

Conrad, Crawford and Parmater participated in a Biomedical Research Foundation program that gives high school seniors an opportunity to experience real-world medical research. Huang participated in the LSU Jumpstart science training program.

Conrad, Crawford and Huang focused on cancer research. Parmater looked at a type of herpes virus that affects the young and people with compromised immune systems.

“I was working on trying to find a new way to treat breast cancer,” Conrad said. “There is a protein this found in all these cancer cells that we think may help kill them. We found that this protein did make it pretty easy to kill off the cells, but we’re still trying to find out how effective it would be in a real situation.”

Conrad plans to study political science at Tulane University this fall.

Crawford studied how genetic typing can be used to target treatment for patients with colorectal cancer.

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He looked at a genetic mutation in colorectal cancer patients and discovered the mutation occurred in about 20 percent of population studied at Feist-Weiller Cancer Center in Shreveport. Medical literature cites a 10 percent rate for the North American population in general.

“It can help with personalizing medicine based on one’s genetic makeup,” Crawford said.

He postponed a college decision until after the Intel fair. Crawford plans to attend Baylor University or Centenary College and major in biochemstry.

Huang studied whether curcumin, the active ingredient in curry, would slow or block the movement of breast cancer cells.

She discovered that at a certain concentration, curcumin did inhibit the movement of the cells she studied.

“It means people could probably use that as a supplement,” Huang said.

She will attend Duke University and plans to become a surgeon with an emphasis on clinical research as well as primary care of patients.

Parmater looked at how a type of herpes virus keeps blood cells alive once it infects them.

“Really, at this point, it’s trying to put the pieces of the puzzle together,” Parmater said of his research. “I’m definitely excited about the Intel fair. I’ve spent the better part of a year researching this.”

Parmater plans to attend the Air Force Academy and major in biochemistry so he can attend medical school.

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BioServe and Seegene to Develop Detection System for Infectious Diseases in India

May 15, 2007

BioServe and Seegene inked a partnership to develop, validate, and service new test systems for a variety of infectious diseases in the Indian market.

Through this partnership, Seegene will access BioServe’s repository of Indian DNA samples to develop tools to test for illnesses such as sexually transmitted diseases, tuberculosis, and HIV.

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BioServe will offer diagnostic testing services using Seegene’s Seeplex™ STD detection system for Mycoplasma hominis, Ureaplasma urealyticum, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Chlamydia trachomatis, Herpes Simplex Virus 2, and HPV. All of the test systems are based on Seegene’s DPO™ technology.

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‘Insulator’ Helps Silence Genes In Dormant Herpes Virus

May 10, 2007

Now, scientists at The Wistar Institute have discovered a molecular mechanism that keeps HSV-1 activation restricted to a single gene for months or even years. The researchers have identified an “insulator” - a stretch of DNA about 800 base pairs long - that serves as a physical barrier between active and inactive regions of the virus genome. Base pairs are the nucleotides on each side of the rungs that connect the strands of the DNA ladder.

“By establishing an insulator in early latency, the Herpes virus can protect this one small region of the genome from silencing, allowing infected cells to survive,” says study senior author Jumin Zhou, Ph.D., an associate professor at The Wistar Institute.

The findings, appearing in the May issue of the Journal of Virology, mark the first time an insulator has been identified in a virus and may lead to ways to develop strategies to manipulate the virus.

Insulators, also known as boundary elements, are DNA segments that work to prevent a gene from being influenced by the activation or repression of its neighbors. About a dozen different insulator elements have been identified in organisms as varied as yeast, fruit flies, and humans.

Not simply passive barriers, insulators help organize and regulate gene activity by marking boundaries on chromatin, the condensed genetic material that forms chromosomes. By establishing chromatin boundaries, insulators can limit the range of action of other DNA elements that work to activate, or “turn on,” the genes.

Recent studies on the LAT region of the HSV-1 genome have shown that nearby regions of the genome contain modifications indicative of silenced chromatin. The patterns found resemble well-studied regions where insulators are found in both yeast and chicken, namely the yeast mating loci and chicken globin locus.

To see if insulators play a role in silencing viral genes during the latent phase, Zhou and his group studied cells infected with HSV-1. The studies showed that during a latent period, the virus binds to a host protein called CTCF, a protein known to act as an insulator in mammals and in fruit flies. What’s more, the findings revealed that the viral DNA binds to CTCF in the same manner as the host DNA binds to the protein.

“By binding in this manner, we believed the CTCF protein was interacting with other viral proteins to form a type of insulator in the virus structure,” Zhou says.

To verify that it was an insulator at work, the researchers then inserted copies of the structure into fruit fly embryos to see if they could block the activity driven by gene-activating elements called “enhancers” during development.

“If the element we were testing was an insulator, then only one enhancer would be affected, and that’s exactly what we found,” Zhou says. Further studies showed that the insulator element blocked enhancer activities in the eye tissue of fruit flies and in human cells in culture.

“Based on these findings, we were able to identify this element as a kind of chromatin insulator that helps HSV-1 maintain a balance in its life cycle.”

The study also showed that HSV-1 chromatin is organized in a manner very similar to the host chromatin, a similarity that may work to the virus’s advantage, says Shelley L. Berger, Ph.D., the Hilary Koprowski Professor at The Wistar Institute and co-author on the study.

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“This means that the virus can take advantage of the many regulatory schemes that the host has worked out for its own chromatin and not have to reinvent the wheel by making its own proteins and unique structures,” she says.

The researchers now plan to study the HSV-1 insulator in mice to see how the mechanism works to block the communication of gene-activating elements such as enhancers and promoters. The group is also working to identify any additional proteins that may play a role in establishing the insulator.

Knowing what genes the virus uses to hide and re-emerge could give pharmaceutical companies targets for designing drugs that disrupt those mechanisms. The studies also have implications for treating and manipulating other types of viruses, Zhou says.

“This study provides one of first examples of how viral chromatin is organized in a very similar way to host chromatin,” Zhou says. “Learning more about the similarities and differences in these chromatin structures may help finding ways to develop therapies that can target the virus and not the host.”

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In addition to senior author Zhou and co-author Berger, the additional coauthors on the study are Qi Chen, Lan Lin, Sheryl Smith, and Jing Huang, all at The Wistar Institute. The research was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health and the Commonwealth Universal Research Enhancement Program of the Pennsylvania Department of Health.

The Wistar Institute is an international leader in biomedical research, with special expertise in cancer research and vaccine development. Founded in 1892 as the first independent nonprofit biomedical research institute in the country, Wistar has long held the prestigious Cancer Center designation from the National Cancer Institute. Discoveries at Wistar have led to the creation of the rubella vaccine that eradicated the disease in the U.S., rabies vaccines used worldwide, and a new rotavirus vaccine approved in 2006. Wistar scientists have also identified many cancer genes and developed monoclonal antibodies and other important research tools. Today, Wistar is home to eminent melanoma researchers and pioneering scientists working on experimental vaccines against influenza, HIV, and other diseases threatening global health. The Institute works actively to transfer its inventions to the commercial sector to ensure that research advances move from the laboratory to the clinic as quickly as possible.

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At Home Treatment for Herpes

May 8, 2007

There are a variety of ways that you can eliminate or at least reduce the pain and suffering caused by herpes, right in your own home, without prescription drugs.

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Home treatment for herpes is best used after the first year of infection, since this is when you will experience the most pain, but these treatments can really be used anytime and in combination with other methods.

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