Anti-arthritis drug also stops tuberculosis bacillus from multiplying in blood stem cells

KU LEUVEN

Immunologist Johan Van Weyenbergh (KU Leuven) and his Belgian-Brazilian colleagues have shown that a drug used to fight arthritis also stops the process that allows the tuberculosis bacillus to infect and hijack blood stem cells.

Tuberculosis (TB) may affect any part of the body, but the spread of the disease might start in the bone marrow. Immunologists from KU Leuven and Brazil have shown that the TB bacillus hijacks the blood stem cells from the bone marrow to turn them into ideal host cells for multiplication. They also found that this mechanism can be stopped by administering an anti-arthritis drug.

Hiding in the bone marrow

About a quarter of the world population is a carrier of Koch’s bacillus, which can cause tuberculosis (TB). Most people who are infected have latent tuberculosis, meaning that they don’t become ill. However, this latent TB can turn into active tuberculosis when the immune system becomes weaker, for instance in the elderly or in HIV patients. Worldwide, TB claims more than 1.5 million lives each year.

TB is mostly known as a lung disease – pulmonary tuberculosis is also the infectious form – but tuberculosis can affect all tissues and organs. It is still unknown how the disease spreads through the body, although researchers already suspected that the bacillus hides in the bone marrow. In any case, the TB bacillus needs a host. And it is precisely the blood stem cells that are “tricked” into becoming the perfect hosts, as a study by immunologists from KU Leuven and Brazil has now shown. 

Hijacking white blood cells

The Belgian-Brazilian research team used blood stem cells from bone marrow and umbilical cord blood of healthy donors. “We put these blood stem cells in a test tube and exposed them to the TB bacillus,” says Johan Van Weyenbergh from the Rega Institute at KU Leuven, who is the co-lead author of this study. “As a result, two processes took place: the bacillus infected and started multiplying in the blood stem cells. At the same time, the blood stem cells transformed themselves into a very specific type of white blood cells. Under normal circumstances, white blood cells defend our body against infections, but in this case, they were hijacked by the bacillus and became ideal host cells.”

From arthritis to tuberculosis?

The good news is that there is a way to stop this process. Van Weyenbergh: “We did a large-scale computer analysis of databases with genes that are important for both TB and blood stem cells. To our surprise, this analysis led us to a medicine against arthritis: Tocilizumab. If you administer that drug in the test tube, you kill two birds with one stone: the transformation of the blood stem cells into host cells comes to a halt and the multiplication of TB bacilli slows down.” 

“Running tests in the lab is not the same as actually treating patients, of course. Our paper presents the results of fundamental research. Further research and testing will be needed to explore the potential of our findings.” 

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About KU Leuven

KU Leuven is Europe’s most innovative university (Reuters) and ranks 48th in the world (Times Higher Education). Located in Belgium, it is dedicated to research, education, and service to society. KU Leuven is a founding member of the League of European Research Universities (LERU) and has a strong European and international orientation. Our scientists conduct basic and applied research in a comprehensive range of disciplines. University Hospitals Leuven, our network of research hospitals, provides high-quality healthcare and develops new therapeutic and diagnostic insights with an emphasis on translational research. The university welcomes more than 50,000 students from over 140 countries. The KU Leuven Doctoral Schools train approximately 4,500 PhD students.

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