July 19, 2013 /
Jul 09, 2013
Background: In MS, immune cells called T cells attack and destroy myelin, the substance that protects nerve fibers, and cause other damage in the brain and spinal cord. These attacks lead to clinical symptoms. In people who don’t have MS, these T cells do not attack myelin because it is recognized as part of their own body, and their immune systems are trained to be “tolerant” to myelin and so do not attack it. One goal in MS therapy is to selectively restore normal tolerance to one’s own myelin, leaving the rest of the immune system intact. In previous studies, researchers have administered a myelin protein (myelin basic protein) orally to mice with EAE, an MS-like disease, and succeeded in suppressing disease, but a clinical trial of this approach involving people with MS was not successful.
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