homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Viral infections impair our muscles' and skeleton's ability to regenerate, scientists report

That's not very nice of them.

Alexandru Micu
June 14, 2017 @ 7:30 pm

share Share

Viral infections seem to disrupt the activity of a key cell-signaling pathway involved in muscle and skeleton health and healing, mental well-being, and prevention of obesity. The findings could help explain why we feel so down when dealing with a viral infection.

Damaged muscles.

Image credits Jean-Louis Ractapopulous.

As if aches and coughs weren’t enough, being sick also makes you feel about as perky as a wet mop. Part of that is our own body’s fault — we’re drowsy so we’ll rest a lot, we get dehydrated to cough less and prevent pathogens from spreading, and so on. But researchers at UC Berkeley have found that it’s not a one-sided street — they report that viral infections dampen the activity in a key cell-signaling pathway called oxytocin receptor MAPK, or OXTR. This structure handles a wide range of processes, from promoting the development of trust and interpersonal bonding to underpinning muscle and bone maintenance and regeneration.

“Our results suggest that viral infections in general may play a role in decreasing muscle health and regeneration, a decline in metabolic health and a lower sense of well-being, as these rely on effective OXTR signaling,” said Irina Conboy, an associate professor in the Department of Bioengineering, whose lab performed the study.

Following the crumb trail

The team discovered this interaction by studying the standard vector used in gene therapy — viruses. Because most cells are really really small and pretty protective of their genes, scientists can’t poke around to rewrite their genomes. Viruses, however, are much simpler and have evolved specifically to paste new genes into cells’ DNA, so they’re the perfect tool when you need to put some new genes into a bacteria, for example. So they’re the go-to choice for most gene therapy applications.

As an experimental control measure — to ensure that the effects seen following therapy are caused by the spliced-in genes and not the viral infection itself — scientists test the effects of the viruses alone before having them deliver any genetic information. The viruses used in this step are called control viral vectors, and they aren’t supposed to change anything in a cell or organism, just interact with them.

The team showed however that even exposure to control vectors is enough to elicit noticeable differences in the subjects compared to healthy cells or animals by interfering with the strength of OXTR signaling. This reduced the regenerative ability of any direct descendants of these cells or tissues, in effect making them age more rapidly.

In one experiment mouse and human muscle cells that the team infected with control viral vectors showed a roughly 70% drop in OXTR strength. When testing to find out how an impaired OXTR pathway affects muscle cells, the researchers found that the vectors could decrease cell proliferation from 20% to a staggering 85%.

These findings suggest that there’s more happening that meets the eye when our bodies are fighting off pathogens, that there’s a kind of war of attrition going on — white blood cells have to fight the viruses off before the systems underpinning tissue maintenance are overwhelmed. Next on the list, the team says, is to work on developing a treatment to counteract this collateral damage caused by infections.

The full paper “Unexpected evolutionarily conserved rapid effects of viral infection on oxytocin receptor and TGF-β/pSmad3” has been published in the journal Skeletal Muscle.

share Share

Trump-Appointed EPA Plans to Let Most Polluters Stop Reporting CO2 Emissions

One expert said it's like turning off a dying patient's monitor.

Denisovan Jaw Found in Taiwan Strait Changes the Human Migration Map

Our elusive ancient cousins once roamed much further east than previously believed

The secret to making plant-based milk tastier and healthier: bacteria

Instead of masking off flavors with sugar, salt, or artificial additives, companies can let bacteria do the work.

A 30,000-Year-Old Feather Is a First-of-Its-Kind Fossil

A new analysis of a fossil found in 1889 has unveiled the presence of zeolites—and an entirely new mineralization method.

This Sensor Box Can Detect Deadly Bird Flu in 5 Minutes. But It Won't Stop the Current Outbreak

The biosensor can detect viral airborne particles.

In 2013, dolphins in Florida starved. Now, we know why

The culprit is a very familiar one. It's us.

Researchers can't rule out the possibility of life existing on Titan

It wouldn't be very much, but it's exciting anyway.

The Earth's oceans were once green. Then, cyanobacteria and iron came in

A pale green dot?

Could man's best friend be an environmental foe?

Even good boys and girls can disrupt wildlife in ways you never expected.

Musk's DOGE Fires Federal Office That Regulates Tesla's Self-Driving Cars

Mass firings hit regulators overseeing self-driving cars. How convenient.