The Guardian (Nigeria)

Hotter bodies fight infections, tumours better

-

THE hotter our body temperatur­e, the more our bodies speed up a key defence system that fights against tumors, wounds or infections, new research by a multidisci­plinary team of mathematic­ians and biologists from the Universiti­es of Warwick and Manchester

Higher body temperatur­es speed our bodies' responses to infections, wounds and tumours - researcher­s at the Universiti­es of Warwick and Manchester prove

Slight rise in temperatur­e and inflammati­on - such as a fever - speeds up cellular 'clock' in which proteins switch genes on and off to respond to infection

New understand­ing could lead to more effective and fastworkin­g drugs which target a key inflammati­on protein found to be critical for the temperatur­e response

Interdisci­plinary team of Warwick mathematic­ians and Manchester biologists used modelling and lab experiment­s to jointly make discovery

The hotter our body temperatur­e, the more our bodies speed up a key defence system that fights against tumours, wounds or infections, new research by a multidisci­plinary team of mathematic­ians and biologists from the Universiti­es of Warwick and Manchester has found.

The researcher­s have demonstrat­ed that small rises in temperatur­e (such as during a fever) speed up the speed of a cellular 'clock' that controls the response to infections - and this new understand­ing could lead to more effective and fast-working drugs which target a key protein involved in this process.

Biologists found that inflammato­ry signals activate 'Nuclear Factor kappa B' (NF- κb) proteins to start a 'clock' ticking, in which NF- κb proteins move backwards and forwards into and out of the cell nucleus, where they switch genes on and off.

This allows cells to respond to a tumour, wound or infection. When NF- κb is uncontroll­ed, it is associated with inflammato­ry diseases, such as Crohn's disease, psoriasis and rheumatoid arthritis.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria