Northwestern University
  Search  
Northwestern
University Relations
UNIVERSITY RELATIONS
Media Relations
University Relations > Media Relations > Northwestern News > Press Release
  About Media Relations  
    Who we are and what we do  
  News Headlines  
    Current headlines from Media Relations and Northwestern media coverage  
  Press Release Archive  
    Complete catalogue of Press Releases  
  Newsfeed/Audio  
    Faculty commentary and guest speakers  
  Observer Online  
    Northwestern's faculty and staff newspaper  
  Media Guide to Experts  
    Find faculty experts on a variety of subjects  
  Northwestern Fact Sheet  
    Northwestern facts and history  
  Media Contact Information  
    E-mail addresses and phone numbers  
Northwestern News
  [text only]  Last updated 04/08/2005
   

MEDIA CONTACT: Elizabeth Crown at (312) 503-8928 or at e-crown@northwestern.edu

March 16, 2004

Lupus Discovery May Lead To Improved Drugs

CHICAGO --- In an important development in the treatment of lupus as well as certain cancers, scientists at the Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern University have discovered how autoimmune lupus T cells stave off programmed cell death and drive production of autoantibodies directed against the body’s own DNA.

Syamal Datta, M.D., and colleagues found that lupus T cells increase production of an enzyme called cyclooxygenase 2 (COX-2), which helps trigger inflammation, in tandem with another molecule called c-FLIP, which then prevents the autoimmune T cells from self-destructing.

Using commonly prescribed drugs called COX-2 inhibitors, which suppress COX-2 activity and, as a result, inflammatory chemicals called prostaglandins, the Northwestern researchers caused autoimmune T cells to die and blocked lupus autoimmunity.

Results of their study, published in the April issue of Nature Medicine, may pave the way for the design of better COX-2 inhibitors with less kidney toxicity or other candidate drugs that interfere with the lupus T cell’s death resistance pathway, said Datta, who is Solovy Professor of Medicine and professor of microbiology/immunology at the Feinberg School.

Currently, COX-2 inhibitors are widely prescribed to treat rheumatoid arthritis and other inflammatory conditions, and have been tested for use in a number of cancers, including colorectal cancer.

Most unexpectedly, the researchers found that only some COX-2 inhibitors have a beneficial effect in lupus, which may depend on their structural peculiarity and not because they inhibit prostaglandin production and reduce inflammation -- something all COX-2 inhibitors do.

COX-2 inhibitors also have been used, with limited success, to treat patients with lupus and in laboratory models of lupus, but in doses much lower than the concentration required to achieve cell death and elimination of autoimmune T cells, Datta said.

Datta’s co-researchers were Luting Xu, Li Zhang, Yajun Yi and Hee-Kap Kang. Yajun Yi is now at Vanderbilt University, Nashville.

This study was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health.