Enzyme Shortage May Lead to Lupus.Just as the garbage that collected in streets during the Middle Ages sustained rats and the bubonic plague bubonic plague: see plague. bubonic plague ravages Oran, Algeria, where Dr. Rieux perseveres in his humanitarian endeavors. [Fr. Lit.: The Plague] See : Disease they spread, DNA DNA: see nucleic acid. DNA or deoxyribonucleic acid One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes. piling up in dead or dying cells creates an environment conducive to systemic lupus erythematosus Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Definition Systemic lupus erythematosus (also called lupus or SLE) is a disease where a person's immune system attacks and injures the body's own organs and tissues. Almost every system of the body can be affected by SLE. , or lupus lupus (l `pəs), noninfectious chronic disease in which antibodies in an individual's immune system attack the body's own substances. . Working with an enzyme that clears away such cellular debris, scientists in Germany have opened a new line of research into this autoimmune disease autoimmune disease, any of a number of abnormal conditions caused when the body produces antibodies to its own substances. In rheumatoid arthritis, a group of antibody molecules called collectively RF, or rheumatoid factor, is complexed to the individual's own gamma . The body comes equipped with several proteins that chop up Verb 1. chop up - cut into pieces; "Chop wood"; "chop meat" chop hash - chop up; "hash the potatoes" cut - separate with or as if with an instrument; "Cut the rope" mince - cut into small pieces; "mince the garlic" and clear away trash DNA. One of them, an enzyme called DNase I, appears less active in many lupus patients than in healthy people. When too much debris accumulates, immune cells identify it as an antigen--a foreign body to be destroyed--and make antibodies against it. This can engender a chain reaction of wanton Grossly careless or negligent; reckless; malicious. The term wanton implies a reckless disregard for the consequences of one's behavior. A wanton act is one done in heedless disregard for the life, limbs, health, safety, reputation, or property rights of cell death. The body offers no defense because its own soldiers, immune cells, orchestrate the killing. To measure whether ample DNase I can clear the decks and prevent such an onslaught, the researchers created mice that lack the enzyme and compared them with healthy mice. "This is the first genetically defined DNase I-deficient animal," says study coauthor Tarik Moroy, a molecular biologist at the Institute for Cell Biology at the University of Essen. Moroy and his colleagues examined 69 mice missing the gene that encodes DNase I, as well as 78 others that had a partial enzyme deficiency and 37 that had a full complement of the enzyme. They observed the animals from birth. At 8 months, 43 of the 69 totally enzyme-deficient mice showed cell-destroying antibodies in their blood, as did 44 of the 78 partly deficient mice, the researchers report in the June NATURE GENETICS. Only 9 of the 37 normal mice had any such antibody present. An antibody binding to material from a dead or dying cell isn't likely to hurt the body, but the action unleashes other immune agents that can, says David S. Pisetsky, an immunologist at Duke University Medical Center in Durham, N.C. "Eventually, downstream, normal cells are affected," he says. While the precise cause of lupus remains unknown, the immune disruption typically starts in cells of the blood, skin, or intestines. Because these cells have rapid turnover, enzymes there can fall behind in clearing debris. Immune agents attracted by antibodies binding to trash DNA are often flushed into the bloodstream and deposited in the kidneys, causing inflammation there--often the most deadly symptom of lupus in people. Indeed, Moroy and his colleagues found that 16 of the 69 fully DNase I--deficient mice and 13 of the 78 partially deficient mice had kidney inflammation. Only 2 of 37 normal mice did. DNase I isn't the only compound that clears cellular debris. Scientists have identified at least three others, which don't necessarily work in concert with DNase I to remove trash DNA. "They may work on redundant or parallel pathways" to ensure that accumulation doesn't reach critical levels, Pisetsky says. Nevertheless, the study "adds strong support to the hypothesis that impairment of ... disposal of cellular debris predisposes to needed development of systemic lupus erythematosus," says Mark J. Walport of the Imperial College of Science, Technology, and Medicine in London, writing in the same journal. It remains unclear whether simply giving DNase I to lupus patients will help. A genetically engineered genetically engineered adjective Recombinant, see there form of DNase I considered safe for people is going through preliminary tests in lupus patients, Walport says. Although researchers haven't yet established the enzyme's effectiveness, "enhancing the `waste-disposal' systems of people with [lupus] remains a viable approach to therapy," he says. Lupus researchers are trying to take advantage of any new technology available, says Evelyn V. Hess, a rheumatologist rheumatologist /rheu·ma·tol·o·gist/ (roo?mah-tol´ah-jist) a specialist in rheumatology. rheu·ma·tol·o·gist n. A specialist in the diagnosis and treatment of rheumatic disorders. at the University of Cincinnati The University of Cincinnati is a coeducational public research university in Cincinnati, Ohio. Ranked as one of America’s top 25 public research universities and in the top 50 of all American research universities,[2] Medical Center and a vice president of the Lupus Foundation of America The Lupus Foundation of America (LFA) is the nation's leading non-profit voluntary health organization dedicated to finding the causes of and cure for lupus. The LFA was founded in 1977, and currently operates a nationwide network of almost 300 chapters, branches and support groups. . By using genetically engineered mice to measure the effects of DNase I, Moroy and his colleagues have opened a new area of investigation, according to Hess. "It's an interesting approach," she says. Lupus affects more than 1 million people in the United States. |
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