In a study on roundworm, researchers at Duke University Medical Center have identified a link between the nervous system and the immune system.
In a study on roundworm, researchers at Duke University Medical Center have identified a link between the nervous system and the immune system.
The findings of the study could pave the way for developing new approaches to human therapies."This is the first time that a genetic approach has been used to demonstrate that specific neurons in the nervous system are capable of regulating immune response in distant cells," said Alejandro Aballay Ph.D., Assistant Professor in the Duke Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology.
For the study, the researchers examined a neural circuit in the roundworm Caenorhabditis elegans.
"The study of neural-immune communications is quite challenging in mammals. The simple, well-characterized nervous system of C. elegans and its recently discovered innate immune system make it a prime system for research. We can study the mechanisms and biological meaning of the cross-talk between the immune and nervous systems, and our studies should set the stage for a new field of research," said Aballay.
"Dr. Aballay has made use of the well defined genetics of the roundworm to reveal evidence of cross talk between the nervous system and the innate immune system. Beyond neuronal regulation of immunity, this work opens the door to understanding how neurons may affect other non-neural processes, such as fat storage and longevity," said Pamela Marino, Ph.D., who oversees molecular immunology grants at the National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health.
They researchers used two approaches to show the genetic connection between nerve cells and immune-response cells.
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It was found that when the flawed receptor didn't work, the neurons were able to block the immune response and the worms became more susceptible to infection by pathogens.
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They also performed a full-genome analysis on roundworms that had altered nerve-cell function because of a mutation in the npr-1 gene.
This analysis showed the animals had poorly regulated expression of genes that encode markers of innate immune responses. particularly, they found that most of the immune marker genes were regulated by a P38 MAPK signaling pathway, which is required for immunity in animals from worms to humans.
"The complexity of the network involved in the communication between the neural system and the immune system expands the number of possible targets for therapeutic interventions. The nervous system alone provides a large number of targets for novel approaches to boost innate immunity against different pathogens," said Aballay.
The study was published in the latest issue of Science.
Source-ANI
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