WEDNESDAY, Sept. 1 (HealthDay News) -- Human immune systems are much
more alike than previously believed, a finding that may lead to new ways
to detect, diagnose and treat cancer and autoimmune diseases, say U.S.
researchers.
The team at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle
created a new way to sequence millions of immune system T-cell receptors
from a single sample. T-cell receptors are a critical part of the adaptive
immune system, which is responsible for protection against new
pathogens.
When the researchers used this technique to compare immune systems in
different people, they were surprised to discover many similarities.
"We found that any two people may share tens of thousands of the exact
same T-cell receptor. This is contrary to previous dogma that each person
has a distinct set of T-cell receptors with little or no overlap between
people," study corresponding author Harlan Robins, a computational
biologist and an assistant member of the Public Health Sciences Division
at Hutchinson, said in a center news release.
"The strong similarity in the adaptive immune cells between different
people suggests that the same disease will induce the same response in
different people. The technology described in this paper can readily
detect such a response, even if the magnitude of the immune reaction is
small. Therefore, we potentially could use one or more of these shared
T-cell responses as a diagnostic for a particular disease," Robins
said.
The study, published in the Sept. 1 issue of the journal Science
Translational Medicine, has implications for cancers and autoimmune
diseases such as type 1 diabetes and multiple sclerosis, the researchers
believe.
More information
The U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases has more
about the immune system.
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