Rogue cells at root of autoimmune disease - Thyroid UK

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Rogue cells at root of autoimmune disease

helvella profile image
helvellaAdministratorThyroid UK
12 Replies

I'm not sure how much I understand of this! Nonetheless anything that claims to explain autoimmune disease, at all, has to be worth at least a short look.

Rogue cells at root of autoimmune disease

Date:

February 13, 2020

Source:

Garvan Institute of Medical Research

Summary:

Breakthrough cellular genomics technology has allowed researchers to reveal genetic mutations causing rogue behavior in the cells that cause autoimmune disease.

There are more than 100 different autoimmune diseases. But what unites them all is that they arise from an individual's own cells -- rare and mysterious immune cells that target not external viruses and bacteria but the body's own healthy organs and tissues.

For the first time, a team led by researchers at the Garvan Institute of Medical Research have pinpointed individual cells that cause autoimmune disease from patient samples. They also uncovered how these cells 'go rogue' by evading checkpoints that normally stop immune cells from targeting the body's own tissues.

The findings could have significant implications for the diagnosis and treatment of autoimmune disease, which affects one in eight individuals in Australia.

"Current treatments for autoimmune disease address only the symptoms, but not the cause. To make more targeted treatments that address disease development and progression, we first need to understand the cause," says Professor Chris Goodnow, co-senior author of the published work, Executive Director of the Garvan Institute and Director of the UNSW Sydney Cellular Genomics Futures Institute.

"We have developed a technique that allows us to look directly at the cells that cause autoimmune disease -- it's as though we're looking through a new microscope lens for the first time, learning more about autoimmune disease than was ever possible before."

The findings, published in the journal Cell today, are part of the visionary Hope Research program.

Tracing autoimmune disease to its origins

Because 'rogue' immune cells are so rare in a blood sample -- less than one in 400 cells -- studying them has been a challenge. Analysis to date has at best revealed 'averages' of the vast mix of cells in a patient's sample, says Dr Mandeep Singh, first author of the published paper.

"Using cellular genomics, we developed a method to 'zoom in' on these disease-causing immune cells in the blood samples of four patients with cryoglobulinemic vasculitis -- a severe inflammation of the blood vessels," says Dr Singh.

By first separating individual cells, and then separating their genetic material, the researchers isolated immune cells that produced 'rheumatoid factors' -- antibody proteins that target healthy tissues in the body and are associated with the most common autoimmune diseases, including rheumatoid arthritis.

Once isolated, the researchers then analysed the DNA and messenger RNA of each of these 'rogue' cells, scanning more than a million positions in the genome to identify DNA variants that may be at the root of disease.

The evolution of autoimmune disease

Through their analysis, the researchers discovered that the disease-causing immune cells of the vasculitis patients had accumulated a number of mutations before they produced the damaging rheumatoid factors.

"We identified step-wise genetic changes in the cells at the root of an autoimmune disease for the first time, tracing an 'evolutionary tree' of how normal immune cells develop into disease-causing cells," says co-senior author Dr Joanne Reed, who heads the Rheumatology and Autoimmunity Group at the Garvan Institute.

Remarkably, the researchers found that some of the first gene mutations that occurred in these rogue cells were known to drive lymphomas (cancerous immune cells).

"We uncovered 'lymphoma driver mutations', including a variant of the CARD11 gene, which allowed the rogue immune cells to evade immune tolerance checkpoints and multiply unchecked," explains Professor Goodnow, who first hypothesised that disease-causing autoimmune cells employ this cancer tactic in 2007.

Further, the researchers found that cells with the lymphoma driver mutations accumulated further mutations that caused the rheumatoid factors they produced to aggregate, or 'clump together', at lower temperatures.

"This explains the patients' cryoglobulinemic vasculitis, a severe condition that develops in some people with Sjögren's syndrome, systemic lupus, rheumatoid arthritis, or hepatitis C virus infection. In these individuals, rheumatoid factors in the blood aggregate at colder temperatures closer to the skin and also in the kidneys, nerves, and other organs, which damages blood vessels and often proves very difficult to treat," says Dr Reed.

New hope for personalised diagnosis and treatments

Not only have the research findings uncovered the root cause of an autoimmune disease -- the ability to identify and investigate specific immune cells at such resolution has vast potential for future treatments to target the cause of all autoimmune diseases.

"In our study, we uncovered specific mutations that mark early stages of autoimmune disease. If we can diagnose a patient at these stages, it may be possible to combine our knowledge of these mutations with new targeted treatments for lymphoma to intervene in disease progression or to track how well a patient is responding to treatments," says Dr Reed.

The researchers are now planning follow-up studies to investigate mutations of autoimmune cells in a range of other diseases, including lupus, celiac disease and type 1 diabetes.

"Identifying these rogue immune cells is a significant step forward for how we study autoimmune disease -- and crucially the first step to finding ways to eliminate them from the body entirely," says Professor Goodnow.

sciencedaily.com/releases/2...

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helvella
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12 Replies
Nanaedake profile image
Nanaedake

Thanks Helvella. I'm glad that autoimmune disease is being unravelled slowly - hope for the future.

stiltzski profile image
stiltzski

It makes sense. I have hypothyroidism - which I believe my mother also had - and lichen sclerosis and my brother has rheumatoid arthritis. My first cousin and her daughter both have MS. I have always believed there was a genetic link.

JGBH profile image
JGBH

Thanks. Not sure I understood either... complex stuff. Having Rheumatoid arthritis and Sjogren’s plus other autoimmune disease... and being hypo, I find it scary...

It will take too long for the research studies.... but perhaps it will help people in future. If only. Rheumatoid arthritis is a life destroyer!

TSH110 profile image
TSH110

Very interesting - along with thyroid disorder there is a lot of non Hodgkin lymphoma in my family, this would explain the link between the two which I have always suspected must be somehow related.

Marz profile image
Marz in reply to TSH110

Both hubby and I have Hashimotos and our Mums died of NHL. I have commented on my suspected connections here before. I did research at the time the thought popped into my head and found a paper but did not file it. 😥

Treepie profile image
Treepie in reply to TSH110

My TSH was 110 when diagnosed in 2014, in 2015 diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes ,mid 2018 had problems leading to diagnosis of non- Hodgkins lymphoma in January 2019.

Otto11 profile image
Otto11

That’s really interesting ( not that I fully understand it) but get the basics. As I have 7 auto immune conditions it would be really helpful to have specific targeted therapy but know it isn’t likely in my lifetime. Great news for future generations though. Thanks for sharing.

milkwoman profile image
milkwoman

Sound Iike progress to me! I’m just glad researches are trying to figure this all out. Thanks fo much for posting!

Trill profile image
Trill

Yes: thanks for posting. Wonder if it will mean any hope for my daughter-in-law aged 40 with MS.

pamgarner profile image
pamgarner

so believe in that nasty autoimmune gene,no one in family other than me has ms,but we have chrones disease,hasimoto thyroid disease,non hodgkins,sojgrens and the list goes on,and I believe gene mutations come from our pollution,water,air etc, bug spray,also

Marz profile image
Marz

Thank you for posting - now had time to read !

Am wondering how the gut micro-biome fits in with all this - our gut bacteria weigh the same as our brain and communicate with each other. We have more bacteria than cells in our body .. so maybe the bad gut bacteria are somehow linked to rogue cells in the immune system - just outside the single cell gut lining ...

Thoughts from a simple soul 😥

Catseyes235 profile image
Catseyes235

There is something wrong with our basic medical system which hasn’t been using the ample opportunities it has had and still has to log details about relatives, siblings etc. and the various conditions we have. The most I’ve been asked is what did my parents die of?! I have mentioned at various points that my aunt, daughter then brother (and since found cousins) all had thyroid disorder. People talked of hereditary conditions but it’s taken a long time to join the dots and see beyond that. It’s like GP practice and medical research exist in parallel universes rather than feeding into each other.

Anyway any progress in research is good. I do wonder if beyond finding gene mutations etc the primary causes will be found in our polluted, toxic, nuclear environment. Were these conditions so prevalent historically? Myself and two brothers , but not my sisters, have AMD but can think of no one in past generations that suffered from blindness and many lived to ripe old ages. Oh well just my thoughts ...

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