New treatment offers hope for diabetes, MS patients


Team Udayavani, Mar 5, 2019, 11:30 AM IST

Washington: Scientists say they have developed a novel and safe treatment for autoimmune diseases such as type-1 diabetes and multiple sclerosis (MS) that arise when the body’s immune cells attack itself.

Current treatments eliminate these misfunctioning immune cells, but also destroy normal, protective immune cells, leaving patients susceptible to immune deficiency and opportunistic infections.

Now, researchers at the University of Utah in the US have developed an approach that targets the misfunctioning immune cells while leaving normal immune cells in place.

“We are really taking treatment for autoimmune disease in a new direction,” said Mingnan Chen, an assistant professor at the University of Utah.

“This is the first time anyone has looked at the programmed cell death protein (PD-1) cells as a target to develop therapeutics for autoimmune disease,” Chen said in a statement.

The study, published in the journal Nature Biomedical Engineering, tested the treatment in a mouse model that mimics type 1 diabetes.

The researchers found the treatment delayed the onset of diabetes in mice to 29 weeks old compared to 19 weeks old for control-treated mice.

The treatment was also applied to a mouse multiple sclerosis model (experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis).

Not only did the treatment halt the progression of paralysis in the six mice in this model, these mice regained the ability to walk.

The team monitored the mice for 25 days after treatment and found the paralysis did not return.

In a normal functioning immune system, the PD-1-expressing cells, including immune cells (B and T lymphocytes), contain a mechanism that acts like a checkpoint that prevents the cycle from attacking itself.

In people with autoimmune disease, these cells, somehow, escape the checkpoint and the immune system remains in a state of alert, attacking body cells.

“We wanted to target PD-1-expressing cells. Using this method, we may avoid long-term immune deficiency caused by common treatments for autoimmune disease,” said Peng Zhao, a former graduate student in Chen’s lab.

The researchers engineered a protein molecule to deplete the misfunctioning PD-1-expressing cells from the body.

The engineered molecule consists of three parts: an anti-PD-1 antibody fragment (PD-1), a toxin (Pseudomonas exotoxin) and a binder (albumin-binding domain).

The antibody fragment acts like a key that attaches and gaining access into the PD-1-expressing cells. The protein toxin kills the cell.

The binder allows the engineered molecule to circulate in the body for a longer time.

Chen and his team developed a treatment that knocks down unhealthy immune cells to turn off the overactive immune response.

They challenged the immune system of the mice in the study to determine whether the treatment had a negative effect on the healthy immune system.

The researchers found the mice in each model mounted a normal immune response.

The experimental therapeutics engineered by the researchers thus far is specific to mice. They are currently developing therapeutics applicable to humans.

“To make similar therapeutics for people, we would need to find the anti-human PD-1 antibody, like the anti-mouse PD-1 antibody,” Chen said.

“If we can generate the human version of therapeutics, I think we could make a huge impact in treating autoimmune disease,” he said.

Udayavani is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest news.

Top News

Report on Sambhal mosque survey likely to be submitted to local court; security tight in district

CCI orders probe against Google, affiliates for ‘unfair’ business practices in gaming apps’ listing on Play Store

Mahayuti leaders finalize power sharing pact with Amit Shah; CM’s name awaited

Karnataka govt to spend Rs 2,500 crore to upgrade 500 government schools

My name not mentioned anywhere, says Ex-Andhra CM Jagan on Adani bribe controversy

Three women missing in dense Kerala forest; Search operation underway

Heavy rain forecast: Pondy govt declares holiday for educational institutions on Nov 29, 30

Related Articles More

Genetic vulnerability for low insulin, unhealthy fat major causes for diabetes in South Asians: Study

Study links overthinking to ‘constant communication’ between brain’s fear-centre, social behaviour

Mangaluru: Campco opposes WHO’s claim of arecanut being carcinogenic

10 month baby gets new heart, new life

World COPD Day: Know your lung function

MUST WATCH

Grafting

Coconut Flower

Prakash Belawadi

Naxal Leader Vikram Gowda

Christmas Cake Fruit Mixing


Latest Additions

Gill returns to nets after recovering from thumb injury

Joint India-Lanka naval operation, 500 kg of crystal meth seized

‘Pakodas for masses, halwa for chosen few’: Congress slams Modi govt as ILO report flags wage inequality

ED raids Raj Kundra, others in pornographic content linked money laundering case

FIR registered against Karnataka seer over his remarks on voting power to Muslims

Thanks for visiting Udayavani

You seem to have an Ad Blocker on.
To continue reading, please turn it off or whitelist Udayavani.