Guest guest Posted January 3, 2001 Report Share Posted January 3, 2001 From: ilena rose <ilena@...> Subject: Autoimmune Diseases Result of Mutations and Infection, StudySuggests > ~~~ this is the same noel rose who speaks on behalf of the silicone > manufacturers regarding implants. thanks to ms. lorenn for finding this for > us. ~~~ > > > http://www.drkoop.com/news/stories/2000/dec/hs/19_immune.html?nl=dkc & sct=top & dt= > 010201 > > Fear and Self-Loathing in Your Immune System > > Autoimmune Diseases Result of Mutations and Infection, Study Suggests > > > Dec 19 2000 16:07:28 > Adam Marcus > HealthSCOUT > > PHILADELPHIA -- Scientists who study the immune system say they've taken a > big step toward understanding why your body's defensive cells sometimes > turn against you. > > Chance mutations, coupled with a viral infection, can trigger autoimmune > reactions that create a potentially deadly family feud within your body. > > The finding, which appears in the current issue of the Journal of > Experimental Medicine, is preliminary and unlikely to produce any help for > patients in the near future. However, researchers say, it could one day > lead to treatments for lupus, rheumatoid arthritis and early-onset, or Type > I, diabetes. Together, autoimmune diseases are among the top 10 killers of > women in America. > > The notion that infections may be at the root of autoimmune disorders has > been around for a century, says Dr. Noel Rose, a specialist in the > disorders at s Hopkins University. > > " It's really very plausible, but when you get down to it there's really not > much evidence that it truly occurs, " says Rose, who is also chairman of the > scientific advisory panel of the American Autoimmune Related Diseases > Association. > > A prime example of the link is rheumatic heart disease, an autoimmune > attack on heart tissue that's thought to result from repeated strep > infections during childhood. > > The latest study offers at least one explanation of how your immune system > can turn into your worst enemy. > > The research, led by Caton, of the Wistar Institute in Philadelphia, > hinges on a class of immune agents called memory B cells. They are the > first dominoes in the cascade of reactions that make up an immune response, > and they have two key jobs. > > The first is to recognize an invading organism, such as a virus, and warn > other immune cells of its presence. They do this by generating proteins, > called antibodies, which are specific to the microbe. They can also > neutralize the invader by attaching themselves to it. B cells " help keep > you from dying " within days from the initial infection, says Caton. > > But there's a subset of B cells that, when they meet an invader, don't do > anything immediately. Instead, they retreat to the spleen, and with the > help of other immune cells, they begin to mutate randomly and with > remarkable haste, he explains. > > In clusters known as germinal centers, they refine themselves into highly > specific cells that flood the bloodstream and defeat the infection. This > process, which occurs about a week after initial infection, also gives the > body a " memory " of the invader, Caton says. That helps them fight off > subsequent attacks from the same organism. > > It's also the reason vaccines work, since these B cells live a long time > and " do a better job of recognizing the virus than the ones you have > inherited, " he says. > > In the latest study, Caton and his colleagues showed that, during their > time in the spleen, these B cells can mutate and become hostile to your > body. Using a strain of mice genetically modified to express an influenza > protein, hemagglutinin, they were able to disguise the viral protein as > part of the body. > > The modified mice appeared to be healthy. But when they infected the > animals with flu, their immune cells launched a muted attack against the > transferred protein. > > Since B cells in the first wave of attack die off, the autoimmune reaction > had to originate with the B cells produced in the second phase, Caton says. > > In other words, the combination of random mutations with a viral invasion > sparked an autoimmune response, albeit a mild one, he says. > > What's not clear is why autoimmune reactions choose to pick on particular > tissues, like the joints in arthritis or pancreas in diabetes. > > " What makes it harmful rather than benign is similar to saying, 'Why are > some cell masses benign and others malignant?' " Caton says. " How that > decision is made is a big mystery. " > > If infections do indeed spark autoimmune reactions, then vaccination would > be the obvious answer. > > Yet Rose says at least one other new study seems to show the incidence of > autoimmune disease rises with more immunization. > > " That makes life very interesting for people who study these illnesses, " he > says. > > SOURCES: Interviews with J. Caton, Ph.D., associate professor, > Wistar Institute, Philadelphia; Noel R. Rose, M.D., Ph.D., professor of > pathology and immunology, s Hopkins University, Baltimore; Dec. 18, > 2000 Journal of Experimental Medicine. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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