http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/health/newsid_1604000/1604049.stm
Wednesday, 17 October, 2001, 18:02 GMT 19:02 UK
Scientists believe it may be possible to halt and even reverse the progress of multiple sclerosis (MS) by targeting key chemicals of the immune system.
A US team has found that inactivating chemicals called chemokines can halt the damage that MS causes to the protective coating of nerves in the brain and spinal cord.
It is this damage to the myelin sheath that causes a variety of symptoms such as numbness, weakness and paralysis.
Essentially, it is caused by a malfunction of the immune system, which begins to attack the body itself. Nobody knows what triggers this malfunction.
However, research has shown that the cerebrospinal fluid found in the central nervous system of MS patients often contains abnormally high levels of chemokines.
Rabbit antibodies
These chemicals play a major role
in mobilising the cells of the immune system to attack the myelin.
The researchers, led by Dr Thomas
Lane, from the University of California, Irvine, tested the theory that
targeting chemokines, or the receptors that detect them, might slow down
or halt the attack on the myelin, giving the nerve coating a chance to
recover.
New Scientist magazine reports that
the team created antibodies that bind to a chemokine called CXCL10 and
inactivate it.
They targeted CXCL10 specifically
because previous studies have shown that levels of the chemical rise sharply
during MS attacks.
When the antibodies were injected
into mice with a condition similar to MS, they helped to slow demyelination,
and even appeared to allow myelin to regrow.
As a result, mice that were crippled
were able to walk again. However, the reversal of symptoms was not complete
and despite continued injections the effects lasted only a few days.
This is probably because the CXCL10
antibodies, which came from rabbits, provoked an immune response that neutralised
them.
Dr Lane's team is now repeating the
tests with a different version of the antibody.
Human tests needed
Dr Richard Ransohoff, an expert in
chemokines and MS at the Lerner Research Institute in Cleveland, Ohio,
said further tests were needed to see if the same results could be repeated
in humans.
But he said: "In terms of treating
the inflammation aspects, Lane's work is as promising as anything one can
imagine."
Other researchers are pursuing similar
strategies to Dr Lane's team.
Universities and companies are investigating
seven chemokines and five different chemokine receptors.
However, Dr Ransohoff warned that
tinkering with chemokines was a risky business.
"These molecules provide necessary
immune functions. Completely eliminating them isn't safe."
A spokesman for the UK MS Society
told BBC News Online: "This sort of work shows promise, but obviously there
is some way to go before we know whether there is any prospect of taking
these drugs into human trials."
The research is published in the
Journal of Immunology.