Suicide molecule halts rheumatoid arthritis

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A researcher from Northwestern Univ. Feinberg School of Medicine has invented a novel way to halt and even reverse rheumatoid arthritis. He developed an imitation of a suicide molecule that floats undetected into overactive immune cells responsible for the disease.

Whimsically referred to as Casper the Ghost, the stealthy molecule causes the immune cells to self-destruct.

The approach, tested on mice, doesn't carry the health risks of current treatments.

"This new therapy stopped the disease cold in 75 percent of the mice," reported Harris Perlman, the lead author and an associate professor of medicine at Feinberg. "The best part was we didn't see any toxicity. This has a lot of potential for creating an entirely new treatment for rheumatoid arthritis."

The study will be published in the February issue of Arthritis & Rheumatism.

Healthy immune cells are supposed to die after they attack an invading virus or bacteria. But in rheumatoid arthritis, the immune cells called macrophages live and go rogue.  They proliferate in the blood, build up in the joints and invade cartilage and bone.  Currently, there is no effective, nontoxic way to stop them.

Perlman discovered that immune cells in rheumatoid arthritis are low in a critical molecule called Bim, whose job is to order the cells to self-destruct. To correct that shortage, Perlman developed an imitation of the molecule, called BH3 mimetic. When Harris injected his drug into mice with rheumatoid arthritis, it floated ghostlike into their macrophages and bam!, the misbehaving immune cells self destructed.

In his research, Harris showed the molecule could prevent the development of rheumatoid arthritis as well as trigger a remission of existing disease. After the drug was injected in animals with the disease, joint swelling was reduced and bone destruction decreased.

Current treatments for rheumatoid arthritis include low-level chemotherapy and steroids. These are not always effective, however, and they are frequently accompanied by side effects. A newer class of therapy, which is sometimes used in combination with chemotherapy and steroids, is biologic response modifiers. These are antibodies or other proteins that reduce the inflammation produced by the hyperactive immune cells. These biologics don't work for everyone, though, and can be associated with side effects including the risk of infection.

Perlman said the next step is to develop nanotechnology for a more precise method of delivering the drug. His research was supported by the National Institute of Arthritis, Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases and the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease.

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2 Comments

  • Gary Engen here. Rick, I think we can assume that Northwestern and/or Mr. Perlman are moving to a patent of BH3. Once there is definition and protection of the IP, the institution can partner up with a pharma that has the connections with NIH to garner the requisite funds to sponsor a clinical trial. Alas, in a perfect world, getting from point A, a promising start, to point B, a readily available therapy for those surely and inarguably in need, unfortunately requires an excruciatingly slow and painful, circuitous routing along a path that is more necessitated and defined by the dollar and those that worship the big bucks above all else, than by any humane appreciation or empathetic concern per the need for expedition to provide such therapy to those currently suffering from this or that disease. Modern medicine and it's research arm is afterall, very much a fully integrated part of the corporate world and we all know what is most important to corporations and it sure as hell isn't human beings. Indeed, corporations are not human, (contrary to Justice Robert's recent and wholly unwise decision to the contrary) and as such non-human entities, they have their own mandates, their own 'responsibilities' . Chief among them is making a profit. Nowhere in any corporation's bylaws does it say that human beings are paramount to corporations and their mission. Our health, our welfare, our very existence is at best, only incidental to corporate entities goals. We humans created the non-feeling constructs, but they surely do have their downsides. So we wait... and suffer... while the business of medicine first determines how it can make the most money off of us.

  • This is HUGE!!! This should be on the front page worldwide...Congratulations!! If this can work for R.A., What about applying this to AIDS, or Cancer etc, etc!!! But...once again, I remain skeptical that we will EVER see this on the market...either the FDA will stall or bury it in paperwork, cause they are in the pockets of the pharmaceuticals or it will be sold off to the pharmas and the end user will have to pay for whatever "profits" they seek...not recouping research dollars invested!! We'll see indeed!

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