B Cells Can Act Alone in Autoimmune Diseases
August 7 (HealthDay News) -- B cells may be more responsible for causing autoimmune diseases like lupus or rheumatoid arthritis than initially thought, according to a new study.
The finding, published in the Aug. 7 online issue of the journal Immunity, may give scientists a new path to pursue in finding ways to stop the immune system's chronic attacks on the body's own tissue during these diseases.
B cells, the source of damaging auto-antibodies, have long been thought to remain quiet in autoimmune diseases unless they are given a kick-start by T-cells. Researchers from Yale and Boston universities had found that toll-like receptors recognize and react to "self" molecules, in particular mammalian DNA and RNA. When this occurs, these receptors help activate B cells that make the classical auto-antibodies of lupus.
These signals, like those from T-cells, start the autoimmune process in B cells. In the new study, the researchers theorize that once activated in this way, the B cells can subsequently recruit T-cells. This creates a "vicious cycle" of chronic autoimmune disease in which the two types of cell prod each other into action.
The findings could explain why autoimmune-disease treatments aimed at T-cells have not done as well as those targeting B cells, the researchers said.
SOURCE: Yale University, news release, Aug. 7, 2008Sponsored Links from Yahoo!What's this?
Anti Legionnaires Disease Technologies
Domestic hot water and cooling tower Legionella control technology for ...
www.procareh2o.com
Fight Gum Disease
Exclusive products reverse gum disease and create perfect oral health.
www.dentalhealthinstitute.com
Rhematoid Arthritis
Learn the Signs, Symptoms, and Treatments for Rhematoid Arthritis.
RheumatoidArthritisInfo.info
Thursday, November 27, 2008
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment