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Protein may be target for Crohn's therapy.


A protein called MIF--short for macrophage macrophage /mac·ro·phage/ (mak´ro-faj) any of the large, mononuclear, highly phagocytic cells derived from monocytes that occur in the walls of blood vessels (adventitial cells) and in loose connective tissue (histiocytes, phagocytic  migration inhibitory factor--plays a central role in the process of inflammation. Researchers now report that MIF's actions extend to the intestines. Their findings suggest that the protein perpetuates the chronic inflammation chronic inflammation
n.
Inflammation that may have a rapid or slow onset but is characterized primarily by its persistence and lack of clear resolution; it occurs when the tissues are unable to overcome the effects of the injuring agent.
 that characterizes Crohn's disease Crohn's disease: see colitis. , a painful gut disorder.

In a series of experiments, the scientists induced mice to develop intestinal inflammation, or colitis. While not identical to Crohn's disease in people, this mouse ailment closely mimics it, says study coauthor Cox Terhorst of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center Both an international and regional referral center, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) in Boston, Massachusetts is a major teaching hospital of Harvard Medical School. It was formed out of the 1996 merger of Beth Israel Hospital (founded in 1916) and  in Boston. By giving mice antibodies to MIF (1) (Maker Interchange Format) An alternate file format for a FrameMaker document. A MIF file is ASCII text, which can be created in another program and imported into FrameMaker. , the researchers were able to prevent the disease from setting in and even reverse it in mice that already showed symptoms. The study appears in the November NATURE IMMUNOLOGY.

While various cells make MIF, the researchers found that macrophages--a type of white blood cell--produced the MIF responsible for colitis. The scientists demonstrated this by stripping mice of their immune cells. They then injected into the bone marrow normal mouse stem cells stem cells, unspecialized human or animal cells that can produce mature specialized body cells and at the same time replicate themselves. Embryonic stem cells are derived from a blastocyst (the blastula typical of placental mammals; see embryo), which is very young  that grew into various types of blood cells blood cells,
n.pl the formed elements of the blood, including red cells (erythrocytes), white cells (leukocytes), and platelets (thrombocytes).


blood cells

See erythrocyte and leukocyte. Platelets are classed separately.
. Of these, macrophages Macrophages
White blood cells whose job is to destroy invading microorganisms. Listeria monocytogenes avoids being killed and can multiply within the macrophage.
 were the main producers of MIF in inflamed intestinal tissue, Terhorst says.

To assess MIF's role in people, the researchers tested blood samples taken from 18 Crohn's patients and 7 people who are free of the disease. The people with Crohn's disease had six times as much MIF in their blood as the healthy people did. After treatment with the drug infliximab, which blocks an inflammatory protein, blood concentrations of MIF fell sharply in the Crohn's patients. This suggests that inhibiting that inflammatory protein can impede MIF secretion in the intestines.

"These results are very exciting," says Thierry Calandra of the University Hospital in Lausanne, Switzerland. Some scientists hadn't expected macrophages to play a major role in MIF-regulated inflammation, he says.

Previous work has indicated that MIF overrides normal immune signals aimed at stopping inflammation, he says. That makes MIF a potential target for drugs intended to treat Crohn's disease.

Such drugs might include an antibody that attacks MIF or a small molecule that wedges into a nook in MIF's molecular structure and thus inactivates it. However, Calandra notes, scientists have yet to find how MIF interacts with intestinal cells and still don't know what positive role MIF might play in the body.
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Author:Seppa, N.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Nov 3, 2001
Words:378
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