Immune cell model paves way for new treatments targeting common infection amongst immunocompromised children

Medicine doctor hand working with modern computer interface as concept

Researchers have successfully engineered human immune cells to model an infection common among immunocompromised people in a breakthrough discovery, paving the way for new drug testing and treatments.

The research, led by the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute and published in Stem Cell Reports, used cutting edge stem cell technology to better understand how the infection invades immune cells and causes health complications, such as lung and skin and soft tissue infections, in immunocompromised people, particularly those with cystic fibrosis.

Murdoch Children’s researcher Dr Shicheng Jacky Sun said the immune cell type the team created in the lab, known as a macrophage, played an important role in infection, inflammation and regeneration. But due to this function was also a natural host for germs.

“Using our stem cell-made immune cells, we successfully infected them with a germ called mycobacteria. We could see where these mycobacteria live inside human immune cells and the immune reactions they triggered,” he said.

“We were also able to use our stem cell model to rapidly test and screen different types of antibiotics against mycobacterium.”

Murdoch Children’s researcher Dr Sohinee Sarkar said the search for effective treatments had been hampered until now by the lack of infection models to test new drugs.

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