Researchers from the University of Missouri and Imperial
College London have found evidence suggesting why vaccines
directed against the virus that causes AIDS and many cancers
do not work. This research is being published in the Dec.
14 edition of The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
In research spanning more than a decade, Gary Clark,
associate professor of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Womens
Health in the MU School of Medicine, and Anne Dell, an
investigator at Imperial College London, found that HIV,
aggressive cancer cells, H. pylori, and parasitic worms
known as schistosomes carry the same carbohydrate sequences
as many proteins produced in human sperm.
Its our major Achilles heel, Clark
said. Reproduction is required for the survival
of our species. Therefore we are hard-wired
to protect our sperm and eggs as well as our unborn babies
from any type of immune response. Unfortunately, our results
suggest that many pathogens and tumor cells also have
integrated themselves into this protective system, thus
enabling them to resist the human immune response.
During the initial stages of life, the body goes through
a process where it self-identifies, determining
which cells and proteins belong in the body, so it can
detect those that do not. After this time, anything foreign
is deemed as dangerous, unless the immune system is specifically
told to ignore those cells and proteins. This situation
arises primarily during reproduction.
When sperm are made, they specifically label their glycoproteins
with Lewis carbohydrate sequences, a specific chain of
carbohydrates. When these foreign sperm enter
the female body, the females immune system does
not recognize them as foreign probably because of these
Lewis sequences. Similarly, the unborn baby also could
be seen as foreign by the mothers immune system,
but she produces other types of glycoproteins that likely
block any type of immune response in the womb. These events
are required for successful human reproduction.
H. pylori is a bacteria known for causing stomach ulcers.
Schistosomes live inside our bodies, resisting many types
of immune responses. Aggressive tumor cells also can defeat
the immune system; this killed more than half a million
people in the United States last year. HIV-infected immune
cells cause AIDS. The common thread is that each carries
Lewis sequences. Clark said this evidence suggests that
vaccines are likely ineffective against these diseases
because Lewis sequences shut down the specific immune
response that enables vaccines to work.
If aggressive cancers and pathogens are using the
same system of universally recognizable markers to trick
the immune system into thinking theyre
harmless, we need to determine exactly how this interaction
works, Dell said. This is where were
planning to take this research next. Understanding how
these markers work at a basic biological and chemical
level could lead to new ways to treat or prevent cancers
and these other diseases in the future.
This work is creating an entirely new way of thinking
about how we must combat viruses like HIV and aggressive
tumor cells, Clark said. We have literally
spent billions of dollars developing vaccines for AIDS
and cancer. However, the latest high profile HIV and tumor
vaccine trials have been spectacularly unsuccessful, perhaps
for some very good reasons. We must become more clever
if we are ever going to solve the problems of cancer and
AIDS.