'Sneaky' bacteria cause
meningitis
A child with a characteristic
meningitis rash
|
Scientists have discovered how bacteria sneak into
the brain and cause meningitis.
The discovery could lead to new ways of treating the
disease.
There are two main types of bacterial meningitis,
meningococcal and pneumococal.
Meningococcal meningitis is the most common in the
UK, with between 2,500 and 3,000 cases.
Most do not cause lasting damage, but, in a few
cases, sufferers may die.
Docking
Scientists know which bacteria cause meningitis, but
until now, they have not known how that happens.
They needed to find out how they get through the
blood-brain barrier.
Once bacteria have got through that, they can easily
get into the meninges, membranes which surrounds the
brain and the spinal cord.
An international team of researchers followed the
progress of the bacterium E.coli in laboratory tests.
Structures on the bacterium called ligands latch on
to receptors on cells in the barrier, docking like a
spaceship.
This allows them to hitch a lift through the barrier
and reach the meninges.
'Important step'
Professor Kwang Sik Kim of John Hopkins University,
Baltimore, USA who led the research, told BBC News
Online: "We knew which bacterium cause meningitis, but
the mechanism was completely unknown.
"If we are to develop new treatments such as
immunotherapy, or vaccines that can prime the body to
prevent the bacteria from invading, we need to fully
understand how these bacteria work.
"This investigation has taken an important step down
that path.
"It could provide opportunities to provide serious
infection because bacterial meningitis is still a very
serious cause of mortality."
Linda Glennie, head of research for the Meningitis
Research Foundation, said: "This is the fundamental sort
of research that very often provides the key to new
therapies or vaccines."
Vaccines
There are three main strains of meningococcal
meningitis - A, B and C.
In the UK, a vaccine to protect against meningitis C
is given to babies. All children have also been offered
the jab.
A vaccine exists for the rarer meningitis A, but it
is not effective for young children, the age group most
at risk.
However, there is no vaccine for meningitis B, which
accounts for two thirds of cases in Britain and kills
200 a year.
It is harder to find a vaccine for this strain
because there are a number of different types of
menigitis B circulating.
The research was presented to the Society for General
Microbiology's Spring Meeting in Edinburgh. |