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Stopping lethal lung damage from the flu with a natural human protein.

2greys profile image
9 Replies

The raging lung inflammation that can contribute to death from the flu can be stopped in its tracks by a drug derived from a naturally occurring human protein, a new animal study suggests.

In mouse studies, all untreated animals given a lethal dose of influenza died within days. All but one of the infected mice treated with the experimental therapy not only survived, but remained energetic and kept weight on – despite having high levels of the flu virus in their lungs.

The experimental treatment is a heavy dose of MG53, part of a family of proteins that plays an essential role in cell membrane repair. Already identified as a potential therapy for conditions ranging from Alzheimer’s disease to persistent skin wounds, MG53 was found in this study to prevent death from a lethal flu infection by blocking excessive inflammation – without having any effect on the virus itself.

news.osu.edu/stopping-letha...

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2greys
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pegbl profile image
pegbl

That's a very encouraging result. Xxx

Tugun profile image
Tugun

Wow. That has so many possibilities - especially for most of the autoimmune diseases.

Tugun profile image
Tugun

When applied intravenously, rhMG53 ameliorates pathology associated with muscular dystrophy, lung injury, myocardial infarction, and acute kidney injury in rodent and large animal models of these diseases13,17,18,19. These data highlight the importance of targeting cell membrane repair in regenerative medicine and present MG53 as a potential biological reagent for restoration of tissue integrity in a broad range of human diseases.

A lot of promising research.

Tugun profile image
Tugun

Always pays to be careful - a downside.

A recent report by Liu et al. showed that cardiac-specific overexpression of MG53 induced cardiomyopathy via transcriptional activation of the peroxisome proliferation-activated receptor (PPARα)30. While these studies raise concerns over the safety of MG53 overexpression on cardiovascular and metabolic function, no studies have been conducted to investigate the physiological impact of elevating MG53 in blood circulation.

soulsaver profile image
soulsaver in reply to Tugun

Links to the original would be good so we can read comments in context... unless you are saying these are your own opinions?

Tugun profile image
Tugun in reply to soulsaver

Hi,

These are all from the link that 2 greys provided above. It was a long article and had a lot of information.

Alberta56 profile image
Alberta56

Sounds promising.

casey16gatsby profile image
casey16gatsby

I always appreciate your insights -- 2greys.

Thanks for sharing!

JCL

Izb1 profile image
Izb1

This sounds promising, lets hope they can continue with this research to make it safe x

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