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Slowing lupus: stifled inflammation limits kidney damage. (Science News This Week).


Restoring the body's balance between the actions of antibodies and natural regulatory proteins regulatory proteins

1. proteins which regulate the contraction of muscle by controlling the interaction of myosin and actin. Calcium is an essential component of this reaction. The two proteins are troponin and tropomyosin.

2.
 is the goal of a therapy being developed for the 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  lupus. This treatment thwarts activation of an array of immune-system proteins called complement, experiments in mice show. The findings clear the way for testing complement inhibition as a treatment for lupus patients.

Normally, antibodies bind to foreign targets such as bacteria and viruses. Complement proteins latch onto the antibodies, and the resulting immune complex immune complex
n.
Any of various complexes of an antigen and an antibody in the blood, to which complement may also be fixed, and which may form a precipitate.
 destroys the invaders and creates debris in the bloodstream. Proteins called regulators of complement activation live up to their name by limiting how much complement joins the complexes, thereby fostering a healthy immune response immune response
n.
An integrated bodily response to an antigen, especially one mediated by lymphocytes and involving recognition of antigens by specific antibodies or previously sensitized lymphocytes.
.

In lupus, antibodies attack a person's own tissues, activating excess complement that gloms onto immune complexes. The resulting debris can overload housekeeper cells in the liver and spleen and settle in the kidneys, where it causes inflammation that jams blood flow and kills cells, says study coauthor Richard J. Quigg, a nephrologist Nephrologist
A doctor who specializes in the diseases and disorders of the kidneys.

Mentioned in: Kidney Biopsy

nephrologist 
 at the University of Chicago. About half of lupus patients contract some kidney disease in their lifetimes, Quigg estimates.

To test whether complement suppression can slow lupus, Quigg and his colleagues used lupus-prone mice that were genetically engineered to produce excess amounts of a rodent regulator of complement activation. Mice overproducing this protein, called Crry, were about eight times as likely to survive at least 42 weeks as other lupus-prone mice were, the researchers found.

In another experiment on lupus-prone mice, 37 of 87 mice (42.5 percent) without extra Crry had kidney disease, but only 11 of 67 animals (16.4 percent) with extra Crry showed such damage.

The results will appear in an upcoming issue of the Journal of Immunology The Journal of Immunology (The JI) is an academic journal that publishes basic and clinical studies in all aspects of immunology. It is owned and published by The American Association of Immunologists. Having an impact factor of 6. .

On the basis of this and other studies, researchers have started a trial in which lupus patients with kidney damage receive infusions of a complement inhibitor or an inert substance. The study is the first to use a complement inhibitor against lupus in people, says V. Michael Holers, 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 Colorado Health Sciences center The University of Colorado Health Sciences Center (UCHSC) is part of the University of Colorado System. It has recently been merged with the University of Colorado at Denver (UCD) to form the University of Colorado at Denver and Health Sciences Center.  in Denver who coauthored the mouse study and is directing the study in lupus patients.

Giving complement inhibitor to people with lupus "is plausible, potentially important, and increasingly supported by experimental data," says David Wofsy, a rheumatologist at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in San Francisco.
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Article Details
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Author:Seppa, N.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Feb 9, 2002
Words:391
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