Gut Bacteria in Relation to MS
Posted: Tue Jul 20, 2010 11:03 am
Hey All,
Thought others may find this interesting as well so I'm forwarding it along. As it's seeming like ccsvi is not the only potential cause of MS, this may be another clue
Thought others may find this interesting as well so I'm forwarding it along. As it's seeming like ccsvi is not the only potential cause of MS, this may be another clue
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/20 ... 162643.htm....
When Hood's animals were housed at Caltech, they developed the disease. But, oddly, when the mice were shipped to a cleaner biotech facility -- where their resident gut bacterial populations were reduced -- they didn't get sick.
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To find out, Mazmanian and his colleagues tried to induce MS in animals that were completely devoid of the microbes that normally inhabit the digestive system. "Lo and behold, these sterile animals did not get sick," he says.
Then the researchers decided to see what would happen if bacteria were reintroduced to the germ-free mice. But not just any bacteria. They inoculated mice with one specific organism, an unculturable bug from a group known as segmented filamentous bacteria. In prior studies, these bacteria had been shown to lead to intestinal inflammation and, more intriguingly, to induce in the gut the appearance of a particular immune-system cell known as Th17. Th17 cells are a type of T helper cell -- cells that help activate and direct other immune system cells. Furthermore, Th17 cells induce the inflammatory cascade that leads to multiple sclerosis in animals
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