Researchers Discover New Approach to Treating Autoimmune Diseases

Development of nanomedicines will target specific cells without compromising immunity

Written byUniversity of Calgary
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A new study from the University of Calgary could change the way researchers understand and treat autoimmune diseases such as type 1 diabetes, multiple sclerosis, and rheumatoid arthritis.

The complexities of these diseases have made it very difficult to develop treatments that can stop disease without impairing normal immunity. Using animal models and human cells in animal models, researchers at the university’s Cumming School of Medicine have discovered a novel mechanism that stops the immune attack, and have developed a new class of drugs that harnesses this mechanism to treat various autoimmune diseases without compromising the entire immune system. The study is published in the February edition of the prestigious journal Nature.

Related Article: Researchers Find Link Between Processed Foods and Autoimmune Diseases

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