News and Research
Immune System
UBC Researcher Discovers 'Control Room' That Regulates
Immune Responses
10-23-2003
VANCOUVER, Canada -- The approximately 50 million people
in the U.S. who suffer from autoimmune diseases like HIV/AIDS,
multiple sclerosis, and arthritis, may soon be able to control
their immune responses, thanks to a breakthrough discovery
by a researcher at the University of British Columbia in
Vancouver, Canada.
Wilfred
Jefferies, a professor at UBC's Biotechnology Laboratory,
has discovered and characterized the mechanics of a cellular
pathway that triggers immune responses. He and his team
have also uncovered a specialized cell substructure, or
organelle, that dictates exactly how the immune system will
be activated.
"This
discovery opens the door to the immune system control room,"
says Jefferies, who is also a member of UBC's Biomedical
Research Centre. "We've found a mechanism that appears
to act like a dial – it can turn immune system response
up or down."
Jefferies
believes that it will take about five years for scientists
to use this information to create new therapies –
such as medication or vaccines – to regulate immune
responses in humans.
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The findings have enormous implications for patients
because treatment may be targeted by adjusting the "dial",
says Jefferies. Immune responses may be increased to fight infection
or reduced to help the body accept transplanted tissue or organs.
The work was recently published online in Nature Immunology
and will be the topic of an editorial when the journal appears on
newsstands in November.
The research findings can be used immediately to test
exactly how the immune system responds to a variety of pathogenic
organisms, including bacteria, viruses and tumours, says Jefferies,
who is a member of UBC's departments of Microbiology and Immunology,
Medical Genetics and Zoology.
Jefferies' research focuses on dendritic cells. A
network of specialized cells, dendritic cells act as sentinels of
the immune system, detecting and relaying information about illness-causing
organisms or pathogens. Jefferies and his team have identified a new
organelle within dendritic cells that sorts pathogens without being
harmed by them and controls signals given to the immune system. The
signals turn immune responses up or down, according to the type of
pathogen encountered.
The immune system protects the body from potentially
harmful substances such as microorganisms, toxins, cancer cells, and
blood or tissues from another person. Immune system disorders are
conditions where the immune response is over-active, reduced or absent.
The research team includes UBC graduate students Greg
Lizee, Jacqueline Tiong, Meimei Tian and Kaan Biron as well as post-doctoral
fellow Gene Basha. UBC researchers, who conduct more than 5,225 investigations
annually, attracted $377 million in research funding in 2002 / 2003.
This story has been adapted from a news release issued
by University Of British Columbia, www.ubc.ca.
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