A small Arunachal sub-tribe has helped U.S. scientists made a major breakthrough in tuberculosis research, giving them new insight on how TB remains a global epidemic causing 1.9 million deaths every year.
Studies carried on the people of Arunachal’s Idu-Mishmis tribe,
suffering from this dreaded disease, have discovered a possible reason
for the resistance of tuberculosis, said the scientists from the
Stanford University and Forsyth Institute.
According to results of the study published in the prestigious “Science
Translational Medicine” journal, this is because of the ability of the
tuberculosis bacteria to infiltrate and settle down in a particular
class of stem cell in the bone marrow.
By doing so, the bacteria take advantage of the body’s own mechanisms of self-renewal.
“Cancer scientists have noted that self-renewing stem cells like these
in the bone marrow have properties -- such as natural drug resistance,
infrequent division and a privileged immune status -- that make them
resistant to many types of treatment,” said Dean Felsher, MD, PhD,
professor of oncology and of pathology.
Not only did the scientists find genetic material from the bacteria
inside the stem cells, they were also able to isolate active bacteria
from the cells of human patients with tuberculosis who had undergone
extensive treatment for the disease.
“We now need to learn how the bacteria find and infect this tiny
population of stem cells, and what triggers it to reactivate years or
decades after successful treatment of the disease,” said postdoctoral
scholar Bikul Das, from the Stanford University, and lead author of the
study.
The researchers and doctors conducted free general medical camps in five
villages of Arunachal Pradesh in India and gave free medicines to all
patients belonging to the Idu-Mishmis sub tribe.
This effort led to identification of individuals who had TB, and successfully completed drug treatment.
From these individuals, the team isolated the CD271+ stem cells, and found evidence of dormant TB bacteria in those stem cells.
These results supported Das’s laboratory and Campos-Neto’s animal study
evidence that dormant TB hide in the CD271+ stem cells, the press
statement said.
The findings raise the possibility that other infectious agents may employ similar “wolf-in-stem-cell-clothing” tactics.
And, although any new human treatments are likely to still be years
away, they suggest a new possible target in the fight against
tuberculosis, which infects nearly 2.2 billion people worldwide.
The study was carried in collaboration with scientists from the Forsyth
Institute in Cambridge; Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto; and
RIWATCH (Research Institute of World’s Ancient Traditions Cultures and
Heritage).
Ista Pulu, a Doctor belonging to Idu Mishimi community, and Vijay Swami, Director of RIWATCH are the co-authors of the paper.
Deepjyoti Kalita, a Doctor from Guwahati Medical College who
participated in research study and Lab work at Roing is also a co-author
from north east India.
The study as to “why TB treated patients remain sensitive to TB tests
for life” made a breakthrough, “the results now will have direct
implications in anti-TB drug development and explain why it is so
difficult to treat active and latent TB” said the RIWATCH release.
This medical research has brought the Idu-Mishmi people and Arunachal on the world map.
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