News and Research
Immune System
Natural Immune Response Reduces Nerve Damage; May Lead
To Improved Treatment For Spinal Cord Injury
5-31-2001
In a series of animal experiments, scientists show for the
first time that damage to the central nervous system causes
the body to mount an immune reaction against itself that
actually protects neurons from further damage. The findings
may lead to a vaccine to improve functional recovery following
spinal cord injury.
The
findings also challenge accepted dogma that immune activity
in the central nervous system is harmful, and that immune
response against the body’s own tissue, known as an
autoimmune response, is destructive. "We show that
this autoimmune response can help the individual to cope
with stress caused by the injury," says lead author
Michal Schwartz, PhD, of the Weizmann Institute of Science
in Rehovot, Israel. The study, funded in part by Proneuron,
Ltd., an Israeli biotechnology company, appears in the June
1 issue of The Journal of Neuroscience. Schwartz has an
equity position in Proneuron.
"These
studies provide new avenues for development of potential
treatments and prevention of paralysis resulting from injury,"
says Esther Sternberg, MD, an expert on the interaction
of the nervous system and immune system at the National
Institute of Mental Health in Bethesda, MD. |
|
The potential treatment could boost in a well-controlled
way the natural protective autoimmune response, and thereby inhibit
the cascade of normal damage that occurs after the initial trauma,
such as spinal cord injury.
In four experiments in rats and mice, Schwarz and
colleagues Eti Yoles and Ehud Hauben found that central nervous system
trauma evokes a protective immune response that reduces neuronal loss.
The authors
say that the ability to spontaneously mount a protective immune response
does not exist in all individuals, but can be induced in deficient
individuals or boosted if it exists. Since this response represents
the body's own attempt to heal itself, stimulating or boosting it
is likely to provide the most comprehensive protection for damaged
nerves.
This
story has been adapted from a news release issued by Society For Neuroscience,
http://web.sfn.org/.
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