From Science Daily website (see original article)
ScienceDaily (Sep. 24, 2012) — Michigan State University
researchers have unlocked secrets in bone marrow that could lead to
improved treatments for colitis and Crohn's disease.
The results, featured in the current issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of the Sciences,
show that the havoc inflammatory bowel diseases wreaks on the digestive
tract is mirrored in bone marrow. Early indications also show that the
disorders of the gut could potentially be treated through the bone
marrow, said Pam Fraker, MSU University Distinguished Professor of
biochemistry and molecular biology.
"It's possible that if we
could reduce bone marrow's ability to produce inflammatory cells that we
could reduce the severity of colitis and Crohn's disease," said Fraker,
who co-authored the study with MSU colleagues Laura McCabe, professor
of physiology and radiology, and Mark Trottier, research specialist.
"This could limit the damage that the disease causes and reduce the
number of patients needing surgery."
Colitis and Crohn's affect
more than a million people in the United States, including a growing
number of children. There are no preventive treatments; however,
steroids are often prescribed to reduce the diseases' pain and
inflammation. The side effect of this course is tissue damage, which
could lead to surgery and additional complications.
Watching a young patient suffer through the pain of severe colitis bolstered Fraker's need to research this devastating disease.
"She
was very frail, sick, addicted to narcotics to numb her pain and had
several intestinal surgeries to no avail," Fraker said. "This became a
huge motivator for me as it drove home how little real help is available
to these patients."
Fraker focused on bone marrow, which is a
large, highly active and responsive tissue. When colitis was induced in
mice, she was surprised by the significant and swift changes that
occurred in their bone marrow.
The symptoms of colitis, such as
swelling, anemia and unhealthy increases in monocytes and neutrophils,
(cells that fight infection but exacerbate the excessive swelling in
intestines) were reflected in the bone marrow.
The bone marrow's
reactions actually fan the flames of the inflammatory bowel diseases
rather than help cure it. When bone marrow amps up production of
monocytes and neutrophils, it does it at the expense of making
lymphocytes and red blood cells, keys to immune defense.
The research was funded in part by the Crohn's and Colitis Foundation.
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