Immune systems deficient regulators may be behind type 1diabetes
January 25th, 2008 - 1:44 pm ICT by admin - Send to a friend:
Washington, Jan 25 (ANI): Scientists at the Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre have revealed that deficient regulators in the immune system might be responsible for type 1 diabetes.
Dr. Ciriaco Piccirillo, a researcher in the Department of Microbiology and Immunology and the principal investigator, said that the main regulators of the immune system, called CD4+Treg cells, are thought to be highly involved in a large range of immune diseases.
In the study, he found that the gradual reduction in their regulating capacity seems to play a critical role in the onset of type 1diabetes.
The regulation of the immune system is important so that it attacks only the site of an inflammation and focuses its attack on pathogens rather than on the body tissues, causing an autoimmune disease.
In a healthy person, CD4+Treg cells deactivate any T lymphocytes, a type of immune cell, that are misprogrammed and could attack the body.
The study indicates that in type 1 diabetic patients this control mechanism may be deficient, thereby allowing the misprogrammed T lymphocytes to proliferate and gain the ability to destroy the insulin-producing cells of the pancreas, which leads to type 1 diabetes.
We have been able to demonstrate this in mice with type 1 diabetes, and other genetic studies have shown that this same mechanism is applicable to humans, said Dr. Piccirillo. Dr Piccirillo is an assistant professor at the McGill University, and the Canada Research Chair in Regulatory Lymphocytes of the Immune System.
Furthermore, the predominant role of nTreg cells leads us to believe that they are also involved in other autoimmune pathologies. Finding this common denominator among diseases that were previously thought to be unrelated is a very promising avenue for future study, he added.
Although CD4+Treg cells mechanism has not yet been completely unravelled, the researchers generally accept that this mechanism is of crucial importance to the entire immune system.
Currently, major fundamental and applied research efforts are being directed down this path and aim to clarify the role of CD4+Treg cells in order to develop innovative cellular therapies that could restore immune stability in patients.
The eventual hope is to treat the cause of type 1 diabetes and other autoimmune diseases and not just their symptoms, as we do today,Dr Piccirillo said.
This study was published this month in the journal Diabetes. (ANI)
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- body tissues
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- control mechanism
- critical role
- diabetic patients
- genetic studies
- healthy person
- immune cell
- immune diseases
- immune systems
- mcgill university health
- mcgill university health centre
- microbiology and immunology
- pathologies
- predominant role
- t lymphocytes
- type 1 diabetes
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