Apoptosis Mystery - Why Does It Sometimes Cause An Immune System Response?
Every moment we live, cells in our bodies are dying. One type of cell death activates an immune response while another type doesn't. Now researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and St. Jude's Children's Research Hospital in Memphis have figured out how some dying cells signal the immune system. They say the finding eventually could have important implications in the treatment of autoimmune diseases and cancer. In the July 18 issue of the journal Immunity, the researchers report a molecule, called high mobility group box-1 protein (HMGB1), which cells release when they die, seems to determine whether the immune system is alerted. But what happens to HMGB1 after it's made and whether the immune system ever gets the signal depends on how the cell dies. Read More...
Read the whole article on Scientific Blogging
More from Scientific Blogging
Related
- How cells die determines whether immune system mounts responseThu, 17 Jul 2008, 12:35:45 EDT
- Major immune system branch has hidden ability to learnMon, 26 Jan 2009, 17:43:14 EST
- Exhausted B cells hamper immune response to HIVMon, 14 Jul 2008, 10:28:13 EDT
- New nano device detects immune system cell signalingWed, 3 Sep 2008, 15:49:42 EDT
- Why some primates, but not humans, can live with immunodeficiency viruses and not progress to AIDSTue, 16 Sep 2008, 11:35:51 EDT