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Scientists identify genetic link that might lead to treatment of Crohn’s disease

Scientists identify genetic link that might lead to treatment of Crohn’s disease
Crohn's disease, an inflammatory bowel disease, does not have a cure as of now.

‘Fibrosis is a response to chronic inflammation, but it is also a process that occurs during normal ageing. If you can reverse this, you’ve essentially found a way to promote regeneration rather than degeneration,’ said lead author Bernard Lo, doctoral student at the University of British Columbia in Canada. In the study, the scientists identified a mutation named ‘ROR alpha’ — hormone receptor — that prevented mice from developing fibrosis after they were infected with a type of salmonella that mimics the symptoms of Crohn’s.

The scientists showed that Rora-aplha deficient mice were protected from fibrosis. The infected intestinal tissues displayed diminished pathology, attenuated collagen deposition, as well as reduced fibroblast accumulation, said the paper appearing in the journal Science Immunology.

‘The gene that was defective in those cells is a hormone receptor, and there are drugs available that may be able to block that hormone receptor in normal cells and prevent fibrotic disease,’ said Kelly McNagny, Professor at the University of British Columbia. The study found that ROR alpha — hormone receptor and group 3 innate lymphoid cells (ILC3) — a type of immune cells contribute to the development of fibrosis in a mouse model of Crohn’s disease.

ILC3 are critical for the development of gut fibrosis and may serve as a target for treating fibrotic complications of Crohn’s disease, the authors suggested. In addition, the team is hopeful that their discovery could be applied to other types of tissue that experience fibrosis. Liver cirrhosis, chronic kidney disease, scarring from heart attacks and muscle degeneration all result in tissue fibrosis, noted McNagny.

Apart from offering a target for potential therapies, the findings could also lead to treatments for diseases of ageing. ‘We think that we can potentially block complications of all these age-related fibrotic diseases by dampening these particular inflammatory cell types,’ McNagny concluded.

Source: IANS

Image Source: Shutterstock

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