When catching a bug, we are all familiar with the often annoying
propensity of the human immune system to fill our breathing passages
with mucus.
In the worse case, too much fluid in the lungs can prove fatal.
However, in a study by researchers at MIT, they have discovered that
healthy mucus is far more complex than previously appreciated and
plays a sophisticated role in helping disarm bacteria.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Anne Trafton | MIT News Office October 14, 2019
More than 200 square meters of our bodies — including the digestive tract, lungs, and urinary tract — are lined with mucus. In recent years, scientists have found some evidence that mucus is not just a physical barrier that traps bacteria and viruses, but it can also disarm pathogens and prevent them from causing infections.
A new study from MIT reveals that glycans — branched sugar molecules found in mucus — are responsible for most of this microbe-taming. There are hundreds of different glycans in mucus, and the MIT team discovered that these molecules can prevent bacteria from communicating with each other and forming infectious biofilms, effectively rendering them harmless.
“What we have in mucus is a therapeutic gold mine,” says Katharina Ribbeck, the Mark Hyman, Jr. Career Development Professor of Biological Engineering at MIT. “These glycans have biological functions that are very broad and sophisticated. They have the ability to regulate how microbes behave and really tune their identity.”
In this study, which appears today in Nature Microbiology, the researchers focused on glycans’ interactions with Pseudomonas aeruginosa, an opportunistic pathogen that can cause infections in cystic fibrosis patients and people with compromised immune systems. Work now underway in Ribbeck’s lab has shown that glycans can regulate the behavior of other microbes as well.
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Press release here :-
http://news.mit.edu/2019/how-mucus-tames-microbes-1014