|      The bacterium    that causes Lyme Disease substitutes manganese    for iron in its diet, a new study finds. The pathogen is the first known organism to live without    iron.   This talent helps the    pathogen evade the immune system, which often acts against foreign invaders    by starving them of iron. Lyme disease is    transmitted by tick bites and can cause fever, fatigue, headaches and rashes.    If not treated promptly with antibiotics, the disease can start to attack the    circulatory and central nervous systems, causing shooting pains and numbness    as well as cognitive difficulties. Now, researchers have    found that to cause Lyme disease, the bacterium Borrelia burgdorferi requires a large    supply of manganese, which it uses instead of iron to make an important    enzyme. The discovery could open new doors for the treatment of Lyme disease,    said study researcher Valeria Culotta, a    molecular biologist at the John Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public    Health. "The only therapy    for Lyme Disease right now are antibiotics like penicillin, which are    effective if the disease is detected early enough," Culotta said in a    statement. Penicillin acts by attacking the bacteria's cell walls, she said,    but some forms of the bacteria don't have cell walls. "We'd like to find    targets inside pathogenic cells that could thwart their growth," Culotta    said. Researchers have known    since 2000 that Borrelia    doesn't have the genes it would need to make iron-containing proteins. But no    one knew what they were using instead. Culotta and her colleagues used    specialized equipment to measure metal-containing proteins in Borrelia, detecting    metal content down to parts per trillion. They found that the    bacterium substitutes manganese for iron, particularly in defensive proteins    that help protect the pathogen against the immune system. The researchers now plan    to map out all of the metal-containing proteins in Borrelia and plan to    learn how the bacteria acquire manganese from their environment. The    manganese mechanism may be a chink in the bacterium's armor that humans can    exploit, Culotta said. "The best targets    are enzymes that pathogens have, but people do not, so they would kill the    pathogens but not harm people," she said. The researchers reported    their findings today (March 22) in the Journal of Biological Chemistry. Copyright    2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This    material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.  |    
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