News Release

Faulty 'fight or flight' response drives deadly C. difficile infections, research reveals

Peer-Reviewed Publication

University of Virginia Health System

Faulty 'fight or flight' response drives deadly C. difficile infections, research reveals

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New research from the University of Virginia School of Medicine's William A. Petri Jr., MD, PhD, (left) and David Tyus suggests that doctors may be able to save patients from dangerous C. difficile infections – a plague for hospitals and nursing homes – by using drugs to quiet a hyperactive nervous system response.

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Credit: Courtesy Petri lab

The portion of our nervous systems responsible for the “fight or flight” response can shape the severity of potentially deadly C. difficile infections, new research from the University of Virginia School of Medicine reveals.

The findings suggest that doctors may be able to save patients from the infections – a plague for hospitals and nursing homes – by using drugs to quiet the hyperactive nervous system response, the researchers say.

“Compared to how much we know about immune system influences in C. difficile infections, the field is just scratching the surface in understanding neuronal contributions to disease,” said researcher William A. Petri Jr., MD, PhD, of UVA Health’s Division of Infectious Diseases and International Health. “Newly identifying components of the nervous system that worsen inflammation will allow us to determine potential therapeutic targets and biomarkers for patients at risk of severe disease.”

About C. Difficile

C. difficile, or C. diff as it is commonly known, is a perpetual burden for healthcare facilities. The bacterium naturally lives in our guts, but extensive antibiotic use, particularly among patients who are hospitalized or in nursing care, can allow it to establish dangerous infections. Approximately 500,000 Americans develop C. difficile infections each year, and about 30,000 die.

Further, patients who make it through the severe diarrhea, nausea, fever and colitis C. difficile can cause are not necessarily in the clear: One in six will develop another C. diff infection within eight weeks, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The new UVA research reveals the critical role the nervous system plays in severe C. difficile infections. The researchers found that the “sympathetic” nervous system – the branch that responds to dangerous situations – can be a key driver of serious C. diff.

Normally, our “fight or flight” response is helpful for avoiding danger. It helps us respond quickly, improves our eyesight, boosts our strength. It also can stimulate our immune system and help us recover from injury. But in C. difficile cases, the nervous system can have a hyperactive response that becomes part of the problem, and UVA’s new research explains why.

“Neurons are the first responders that coordinate defenses against toxic attacks. Sometimes those responders don’t recruit the right size and kind of artillery and that can make things worse,” said researcher David Tyus, a neuroscience graduate student at UVA. “Interestingly, the receptor we identified as important in C. difficile infection [the alpha 2 adrenergic receptor] has also been linked to irritable bowel syndrome. I’m curious to know if there could be a unifying underlying mechanism between the two disease contexts.”

Promisingly, the researchers found that targeting the receptor in lab mice reduced intestinal inflammation and decreased C. difficile severity and mortality. That suggests that, with further research, doctors may be able to take a similar tact to better treat severe C. diff infections in patients. For example, they may be able to surgically remove a portion of nerves in the gut, or they may be able to develop medicines to target the alpha 2 receptor – as Petri and Tyus are attempting to do.

“Our next step is to determine which cells with the alpha 2 receptor are receiving signals from the sympathetic nervous system and play a role in C. difficile-mediated disease,” Petri said. “We are very excited to think about how our findings translate to clinic and how the sympathetic nervous system might play a role in recurrent infection. I hope that this study sets the foundation for future findings of how neurons affect the course of C. difficile infection outcomes.”

Findings Published

The researchers have published their findings in the scientific journal Cell Reports Medicine. The article is open access, meaning it is free to read.

The research team consisted of Tyus, Jhansi L. Leslie, Farha Naz, Jashim Uddin, Brandon Thompson and Petri. Petri is a consultant for TechLab Inc., a company that produces diagnostic tests for C. difficile. Petri and Tyus are also seeking a patent with UVA for alpha 2 adrenergic receptor blockade for the treatment of C. difficile colitis.

The study was supported by the National Institutes of Health, grants T32AI007046, F31AI161787-04t, R01348 AI152477 and R01AI124214.

To keep up with the latest medical research news from UVA, subscribe to the Making of Medicine blog at http://makingofmedicine.virginia.edu.


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