(On a side note, I am wondering how you take a biopsy from a human brain?! Does the person have to be dead?)
What does he mean by ‘transferable factors’? Is he talking about viruses, or other infectious agents or is it wider than that?
Research from my group identified the molecular mechanism underlying HHV-6 mediated mitochondrial damage and this is groundbreaking work involving viral small RNAs in regulation of host mitochondrial homeostasis. For a long time we have known that mitochondrial function is severely affected in ME/CFS. I believe that there is a pathogenic connection to this process and in my opinion HHV-6 presents an ideal model to take this hypothesis forward. I believe that the pathogenic mechanism we are studying might be conserved across the different viral infections associated with ME/CFS. We are working towards a complete understanding of this process.
We are not clinical centers but we managed to analyze a small number of ME/CFS patients (n=10) from Europe. We found HHV-6/HHV-7 in blood cells of 60% of these cases. However, the viral load was not enough to directly link the virus to the disease. I guess this is one of the reasons, the clinicians have been skeptical about linking ME/CFS to any infection. We overcame this hurdle by finding out that it is probably not necessary to have viral infection in every cell to cause mitochondrial dysfunction. It seems possible that one cell having viral activation can alter mitochondrial function in neighboring or even distant cells by secreting modulators outside the infected cell. We have been able to demonstrate this mechanism using our viral cell culture model as well as ME/CFS patient samples. This presents us a unique scenario to study role of HHV-6/HHV-7 in ME/CFS.
https://solvecfs.org/smci-2016-ramsay-team-5-research-update/
Interview with Bhupesh
(On a side note, I am wondering how you take a biopsy from a human brain?! Does the person have to be dead?)
The networking mitochondria thing is already understood?I am sceptical of that approach. We have not so far ever known that mitochondrial function is affected in ME. It is a speculation that is quite difficult to marry with the clinical picture.
And if you fail to find something you cannot really just say, oh we did not need to find it anyway for it to be the problem.
This looks like doing science backwards - deciding what the answer is and then trying to force all the results to fit.
I will be as pleased as anyone if something comes out of this research but I think ME research deserves a better approach than this. Something that recognises the true level of our ignorance and does not raise undue expectations.
I just wonder if the findings in Alzheimer's disease may provide a template. Here a bacteria (gingivalis) produces a protein (gingpains) which cleaves a protein produced by the person/patient i.e. Apolipoprotein E (APOE). Presumably there's a cascade affect resulting from the cleavage of APOE ---leading to Alzheimer's. This discovery was the result of a GWAS study --- Chris Pointing has applied for funding for a GWAS study for ME!
So possibly Bhupesh has found a consequence/downstream affect (mtichondrial fragmentation); if so then finding the upstream cause seems like a challenge!
Ron Davis's group were trying to identify the something in the blood; success in identifying that might clarify Bhupesh's findings.
I think a clear difference is though the reversibility of ME vs the lasting neurological damage found in Alzheimer’s, especially with spontaneous remissions in ME. I’m unsure however if that would preclude this etiology.
I'm just very unsure that the something in the blood is causing the me/cfs symptoms and not way down stream leading to some minor changes. I still think it'll be useful to figure out what it is, and maybe reverse engineer that to find out what's going on.
I'm actually kind of surprised we haven't figure out that yet after what feels like 3-4 years. But, perhaps that is due to my naivety in biomedical research.
I just wonder if the findings in Alzheimer's disease may provide a template. Here a bacteria (gingivalis) produces a protein (gingpains) which cleaves a protein produced by the person/patient i.e. Apolipoprotein E (APOE). Presumably there's a cascade affect resulting from the cleavage of APOE ---leading to Alzheimer's. This discovery was the result of a GWAS study --- Chris Pointing has applied for funding for a GWAS study for ME!
So possibly Bhupesh has found a consequence/downstream affect (mtichondrial fragmentation); if so then finding the upstream cause seems like a challenge!
Ron Davis's group were trying to identify the something in the blood; success in identifying that might clarify Bhupesh's findings.