Newly Discovered Gene Variant Implicated In Lupus | Arthritis Information

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Your immune system may have more in common with a Corvette than you thought. When a virus or bacteria enters a human body, the immune system revs up to fight and expel the invader. Once the invader is gone, the body puts on the brakes to stop the immune response.

But a new study by Patrick Gaffney, M.D., and Kathy Moser, Ph.D., of the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation shows that variation of a particular gene - known as TNFAIP3 - may cause the immune system to keep going at full speed long after the threat is gone, causing damage to the body.

"TNFAIP3 can be thought of as a critical brake mechanism for the immune system," said Gaffney, the senior author on the study and associate member of OMRF's Arthritis and Immunology Research Program. "When the gene doesn't function properly, the immune system redlines."

http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/117056.php
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