Why common colds are so terribly annoying
Washington, October 24 ANI: A team of researchers have found that the
human rhinovirus HRV, which causes 30 to 50 per cent of common colds, can manipulate the host's genes to cause some of the most annoying symptoms. The researchers say that HRV hijacks many of your genes, and causes an overblown immune response that ends up with the host's nose being overblown. "The study's findings are a major step toward more targeted cold prevention and
treatment strategies while also serving as a valuable roadmap for the broader respiratory
science community," said Dr.
David Proud, a professor in the Department of Physiology and Biophysics at the
University of Calgary. Proud, lead author of the study published in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care
Medicine, has revealed that he made these findings while working with collaborators from the
University of
Virginia and the Procter and
Gamble Company. He said that colds, though usually considered to be minor infections of the nose and throat, could have much more serious
health repercussions. "Rhinovirus is the major cause of the common cold, but it is also an important pathogen in more serious conditions, such as
asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary
disease COPD," he said. Dr. Ron
Turner of the
University of
Virginia, one of the study's authors, added: "Advances in our understanding of the
biology of the common cold may eventually lead to
improvements in
treatment or methods for prevention of colds." For their study, the researchers recruited
volunteers who were inoculated with either HRV or a sham inoculation and obtained cell scrapings from the nasal passages 8 and 48 hours after inoculation, and assessed the
genetic changes by microarray, also know as gene chip technology. After eight hours, there were virtually no differences between the control and the HRV-inoculated group, but by the 48-hour mark, more than 6500 genes has been significantly up- or down-regulated in the HRV subjects-many of the more highly up-regulated genes fell into two major
categories: genes making antiviral proteins, including viperin genes making pro-inflammatory cytokines. "This is the first comprehensive
picture to identify several groups of genes that are likely to contribute to the pro-inflammatory and antiviral response," said Dr. Proud. The study also revealed that viral titer more than doubled in cells that had had the viperin-
producing gene "knocked down", showing that HRV replication was hampered by viperin. "This had never been examined during rhinovirus infections. Some evidence existed that this protein only discovered a few years ago had effects on influenza, but nothing was known about its role in rhinovirus infections. So it was a bit unexpected," said Dr. Proud. "
Overall these
data provide new insights into the host response to HRV infection and identify several
novel candidate genes that require further study to clarify their role in
disease pathogenesis. This may identify proinflammatory, or host defense pathways that could be targeted for
drug development, not only as
treatments for colds but also for viral exacerbations of
asthma and COPD. "The fact that genes associated with structural 'remodeling' or the airways were also altered,
supports further study of the role of rhinovirus infections in airway
remodeling in
asthma," he added. ANI
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